KSA widens crackdown on women’s rights activists

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BBC Online :
Saudi Arabia has reportedly arrested three more women’s rights activists in a crackdown launched just weeks before a ban on women driving will be lifted.
Human rights groups said at least 11 people, most of them women who had long campaigned for the right to drive, had now been detained since last week.
Officials have said they are suspected of “suspicious contact with foreign parties” and undermining “stability”.
Other activists have said the crackdown is “unprecedented” and “shocking”.
The US has expressed concern about the detentions and said it is “keeping a close eye” on the progress of reforms in the Gulf state, which is a key regional ally.
King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud and his son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, drew widespread praise last year when they announced that the decades-old ban on women driving would end on 24 June.
Saudi women’s rights activists, including those who have been imprisoned for defying the ban, celebrated the decision. But they also vowed to continue campaigning for the end of other laws
they consider discriminatory.
Women must adhere to a strict dress code, be separated from unrelated men, and be accompanied by or receive written permission from a male guardian – usually a father, husband or brother – if they want to travel, work or access healthcare.
During an interview with CBS News in March before a trip to the US, the crown prince stated: “Saudi women still have not received their full rights. There are rights stipulated in Islam that they still don’t have. We have come a very long way and have a short way to go.”
But on Friday, it emerged that the Saudi authorities had recently detained seven prominent activists – five women and two men. A statement issued the following day by the Presidency of the State Security – which reports directly to the king’s office – said they faced charges for “suspicious contact with foreign parties” and undermining the “security and stability” of the state.
Pro-government newspapers and social media accounts branded them “traitors”.
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