Saudi women traveling solo can now stay in hotels

(eTN) – Women in Saudi Arabia can now stay in a hotel or a furnished apartment without a male guardian, Al Watan newspaper reported.

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(eTN) – Women in Saudi Arabia can now stay in a hotel or a furnished apartment without a male guardian, Al Watan newspaper reported. This, following a government decision that comes as the country faces increasing criticism for its severe restrictions on women. The daily paper, deemed close to the Saudi government, reported Monday that a circular from the Saudi government authorizing hotels to accept lone women as long as their information is sent to a local police station.

The decision was adopted after a study conducted by the Saudi Ministry of Interior, the Supreme Commission of Tourism and the religious police authority known as the Commission for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, reported the Al Watan.

This is one big step for millions of oppressed Saudi women, and those who reside or work there as expatriate workers or wives of guest/contract workers โ€“ Muslim or not.

Although traditional roles of women in Saudi Arabia have changed through the years, alongside the kingdomโ€™s modernization, most customs have remained as they were many centuries ago. Most Saudi women live in privacy and wear the veil outside the home. They can never be seen unveiled even inside their home by men outside their immediate family. Visitors are warned not to ask or insist women to remove the head cover.

In their secluded life, they often view the outside world through the closely carved wooden screened balconies that allow them the advantage of seeing but not being seen, much as their eternal screens, the veil and cloak, provide. At their homes, visitors are segregated according to gender in separate rooms. Females donโ€™t mingle with males, said Al Baabโ€™s Susan Al Gahtani. A practical handbook on proper conduct in the KSA stresses one should not insist an Arab to bring his wife to any social gathering. There are two separate social groups who do not intermingle in public gatherings.

Guest workers of the Kingdom have to conform to stringent laws under the Islamic code, otherwise run the risk of arrest or deportation. All women are not allowed to drive in Saudi, not even bicycles. Airlines warn women not to stare at men, and vice versa. Men must not express admiration for a woman unless she is a fiancรฉe. Women are advised to avoid going out alone for their own safety and security; not talk intimately with their husbands or go out with male friends, provided they maintain a distance from each other.

Traveling alone for women indeed represents advancing modernization and paving for more liberal reforms. If this is one way for Saudi Arabia to keep US interests alive, then good for the local women. Indeed, KSA has always tried to keep the harmony with the USA.

After all, weโ€™re talking investments in trillions of dollars – that is a thousand billion dollars, which makes up almost eight percent of the size of the American economy. This means that Saudi Arabia is capable of dealing a blow to the American economy at any moment if it decides to withdraw its investment and its business there. โ€œThe Saudis were a country lingering in the shadow and not expecting the world to turn to it. But suddenly, Saudi Arabia found itself in the spotlight with all countries trying to woo it. As a result, the Saudis found themselves in a dilemma that they, to this day, cannot solve: Should it respond to the demands of transformation to modernity on its land or should it hold on tight to its ancient traditions and customs that have united it but without allowing it to develop?โ€ asked Sawt Al-Ummaโ€™s Yousra Zahran.

The discovery of oil even amplified that Saudi pride. Oil gave Saudis an overwhelming feeling of strength; that they could force others to submit to their will. But the fluctuation of oil prices caused Saudis to suffer from more instability in their psychology and their character. According to American journalist Sandra McKay, wife of an American diplomat based in KSA for four years in the 80s, the Saudis no longer knew if they controlled the world or if the world plays with them.

McKay who wrote the book The Saudis said: โ€œSaudi Arabia uses its oil not to achieve economic gains as much as to dominate the world. The arrogance that characterizes the Saudi mentality angers Westerners and prevents the Saudis themselves from moving forward. It also imprisons Saudi women behind cages for fear that they [women] might squander the honor of their men. Each time Westerners go to Saudi Arabia, they are shocked by the strength of the chains imposed on women.โ€

McKay explained that these chains are an attempt to prevent Saudi women from committing vices and is not aimed at protecting them. She describes Saudi society as a society obsessed with sex and that imposes dozens of taboos on itself only to break them. That it is a society that tries to get everything without losing anything. Youths are trying to break everything imposed on them by their elders and the seniors are not willing to admit that they have lost control over their youth. For McKay, Saudis are people who excel at hiding their fears and doubts behind masks of civilization, but this ability to hide quickly disappears with the appearance of any sign of threat to their future and their financial security.

WHAT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS ARTICLE:

  • The decision was adopted after a study conducted by the Saudi Ministry of Interior, the Supreme Commission of Tourism and the religious police authority known as the Commission for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, reported the Al Watan.
  • The daily paper, deemed close to the Saudi government, reported Monday that a circular from the Saudi government authorizing hotels to accept lone women as long as their information is sent to a local police station.
  • According to American journalist Sandra McKay, wife of an American diplomat based in KSA for four years in the 80s, the Saudis no longer knew if they controlled the world or if the world plays with them.

About the author

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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