Women are
not allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia ©Fayez Nureldine (AFP)
|
A Saudi man has been
jailed for one year for calling for an end to the Muslim kingdom's guardianship
system that gives men wide controls over women, local media said Tuesday.
AFP
report continues:
The
man, who was also fined 30,000 riyals (US$8,000) by a court in the eastern city
of Dammam, was convicted of "inciting to end guardianship of women"
in statements he posted on Twitter and in public posters, the Okaz daily said.
He
was arrested while putting up posters in mosques in Al-Hasa district calling
for an end to the globally unique system that subjects women in the
ultra-conservative kingdom to male control.
During
questioning, police found out that the man was also behind a wide online
campaign to end the guardianship, the paper said.
The
defendant admitted pinning up the posters in several mosques, saying he solely
launched an "awareness campaign" after finding that some "female
relatives were facing injustice at the hands of their families," the daily
said.
Thousands
of Saudis signed in September a petition urging an end to the guardianship
system following a Twitter campaign which the court claims was launched by the
defendant.
Saudi
Arabia has some of the world's tightest restrictions on women, and is the only
country where they are not allowed to drive.
Under
the guardianship system a male family member, normally the father, husband or
brother, must grant permission for a woman's study, travel and other
activities.
Activists say that even female prisoners have to be received by the guardian upon their release, meaning that some have to languish in jail or a shelter beyond their sentences if the man does not want to accept them.
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