Arab News
Wednesday, 16, February, 2005 (07, Muharram, 1426)

Women and Elections
Raid Qusti, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Covering the recent municipal elections in the Kingdom was a thrilling 
experience. On one hand, as a journalist, I was able to meet both candidates 
and voters. On the other hand, as a Saudi, the whole process was 
unprecedented in our nation's history. Along with many others, I hope the 
elections marked the beginning of public participation in decision-making. 
Almost all of those I spoke to said that they were doing this from a feeling 
of national duty. Their love for their country, first and foremost, was what 
compelled them first to register as voters and then cast their votes to 
choose their candidates. They also felt the whole process has begun a new 
era in Saudi Arabia that will pave the way for larger elections: The entire 
municipal council and the Shoura Consultative Council as well.

The Riyadh municipality elections were also an opportunity for foreign 
journalists to speak openly to Saudis and ask them about their reactions and 
feelings. It was a chance for them to make their analysis as a result of 
direct contact with the people and not from talking to other journalists, 
international analysts or even those who regularly comment on things in 
Saudi Arabia but have never actually managed to visit the country.

What I noticed from the questions asked by foreign journalists in the press 
conferences organized by the Election Commission was that they were focused 
mainly on two issues: Women not being allowed to vote and also on whether 
these small elections would lead to larger ones in future.

Commission officials cited the reasons why the government was unable to 
include women in these elections. The reasons were, as we have heard many 
times, the technical difficulties of having separate voting centers for 
women, as well as employing women in cities and rural areas to receive women 
voters. Because of the limited time available, it simply was not possible, 
they said. Even though many women readers of Arab News criticized me in the 
past for supporting the government's reasons for not including women in this 
round, I still believe them to be practical. Interestingly, this same topic 
was brought up round a dinner table with my relatives.

Both my father-in-law and my wife - herself a media person and a supporter 
of women's rights - believe that at present, allowing women to vote would 
not have been practical due to the social conditions in Saudi Arabia.
Their views as well as mine do not mean, however, that a woman who chooses 
to vote or nominate herself should be prevented from doing so in the future. 
As a citizen, that should be her right. From my point of view, I am not 
concerned about the practicalities of setting up separate women's centers or 
employing women to do certain jobs in cities or rural areas. Those things 
could be overcome with proper planning and carried out without problems. 
What is beyond that is what I want to comment on.

Having seen how candidates in Riyadh plastered their photos on street 
advertisements and in local newspapers, how would a woman candidate have run 
her campaign? We must bear in mind that many Saudis still believe that a 
woman's picture should only be viewed by close relatives and certainly not 
by unrelated members of the public.

Let's get practical. Would a Saudi woman actually want to place her picture 
and her full name on a street advertisement or in a newspaper advertisement? 
She wouldn't. And even if she were allowed to do so by the authorities, only 
a handful of the female community would actually consider doing it. If we 
open our daily newspapers and read columns by female journalists, we will 
see that the writers are faceless. Not because the law prevents a woman from 
putting her photo beside her column but because she chooses not to for 
social and cultural reasons.

Hypothetically, let us say that women did not need to place street 
advertisements or advertisements in newspapers. How else would they reach 
the public? Would they set up tents like their male counterparts? And even 
if they did, since the religious leaders here deem mixing sinful, how would 
she receive men and women who are curious to ask about her platform? Would 
the tents be split in half, one side for men and the other for women? Would 
she even allow herself to go to the male's side to address them and answer 
questions?

Or would it all have to be done over microphones or split units? And 
continuing hypothetically, let us say one of the women won a seat on the 
council. She then becomes an official. Would our society accept the fact of 
a woman appearing in public in a press conference, talking to the media and 
making official announcements, as is the case in neighboring Gulf states? 
And what about the municipality itself? How would male and female colleagues 
within the municipality interact since they would have to be in separate 
buildings or departments; would all contact be over the phone?

Clearly that would be the only possibility since mixing the sexes is 
considered sinful.
Readers should not misunderstand me. We are not Bahrain or Kuwait or any 
other Gulf state.
As long as traditions and customs that are not universal in the 21st century 
prevail in the Kingdom and as long as we continue to teach in our 
universities that "Listening to a woman's voice is sinful," women who 
honestly believe they have a role in our society's development will be 
either labeled "brainwashed by the West" or "sinners." 



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