Found an interesting topic on the Washington
Post.
With Saudi Arabian women behind the wheel since Saturday
to protest their country's refusal to grant driver's licenses to women, they’re
challenging not only long-standing restriction, but also a the larger system of
Saudi Arabian gender-based laws, some of the harshest in the world.
According to one measurement, though, there are actually
several countries that rank lower on women;s rights than Saudi Arabia. The
World Economic Forum, which publishes the preeminent ranking on gender gap
issues, ranked Saudi Arabia 10th from the bottom in its 2013 report -- ahead of
Mali, Morocco, Iran, Cote d’Ivoire, Mauritania, Syria, Chad, Pakistan and
Yemen. Women’s rights abuses are by no means limited to North Africa, West
Africa or the Middle East, though that’s where we tend to hear such stories
most frequently.
“A lot of the most severe stuff comes out of legal or de
facto guardianship systems,” said Rothna Begum, a researcher who tracks women’s
rights in the Middle East and North Africa for the advocacy group Human Rights
Watch.
But she adds that, especially in Saudi Arabia, “things
are modernizing.”
Here are nine other remarkable legal restrictions against
women, from Asia to Latin America :
1. India (some parts): Road safety rules don’t apply to
women. In some states of India, women
are excepted from safety rules that mandate motorcycle passengers wear helmets
-- an exemption that kills or injures thousands each year. Women’s rights
advocates have argued the exemption springs from a culture-wide devaluation of
women’s lives. Supporters of the ban say they’re just trying to preservewomen’s
carefully styled hair and make-up -- which isn’t exactly a feminist response.
2. Yemen: A woman is considered only half a witness. That’s the policy on legal testimony in Yemen, where a
woman is not, to quote a 2005 Freedom House report, “recognized as a full
person before the court.” In general, a single woman’s testimony isn’t taken
seriously unless it’s backed by a man’s testimony or concerns a place or situation
where a man would not be. And women can’t testify at all in cases of adultery,
libel, theft or sodomy.
3. Saudi Arabia and Vatican City: Women can’t vote...
still. This is amazingly the case in
Saudi Arabia, though a royal decree, issued in 2011, will let women vote in
Saudi elections in 2015. Vatican City is the only other country that allows
men, but not women, to vote.
4. Ecuador: Abortion is illegal, unless you’re an
“idiot.” Begum says this is the policy
in Ecuador, where abortions have long been outlawed for everyone but “idiots”
and the “demented.” Politicians are considering a policy with the more politely
worded term “mentally ill,” but that won’t change abortion’s legal status in
Ecuador -- or, more importantly, the fact that the law is frequently used to
criminalize miscarriages.
5. Saudi Arabia and Morocco: Rape victims can be charged
with crimes. Many, many countries fail
to protect the victims of rape, but some go a step further -- punishing women
for leaving the house without a male companion, for being alone with an
unrelated man, or for getting pregnant afterwards. The most infamous case may
be Saudi Arabia’s “Qatif girl,” but a recent suicide in Morocco also made
headlines -- 16-year-old Amina Filali killed herself after a judge forced her
to marry her alleged rapist, in keeping with a policy that invalidates
statutory rape charges if the parties marry.
6. Yemen: Women can’t leave the house without their
husbands’ permission. Yemen, where this
law remains in force, does allow for a few emergency exceptions, Begum says: if
the woman must rush out to care for her ailing parents, for instance.
7. Saudi Arabia: Women can't drive. Read more about the ban and how women are challenging it here.
The good news? According to the World Economic Forum’s
most recent gender gap report, equality has made “modest” gains in the Middle
East. And Begum, of Human Rights Watch, says there’s lots of agitation for more
change.
“Women in Saudi Arabia are
highly educated and qualified,” she said. “They don’t want to be left in the
dark.”
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