The men in charge of Saudi Arabia really don’t care a jot about Muslim women

    Yvonne Ridley/Middle East Monitor: 

    If ever there was a time for the government of Saudi Arabia to stand up and defend its female citizens it is now, with Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman’s “reforms” in full swing; to great international acclaim, women can now drive cars on the public roads in the Kingdom and even watch football in a stadium. However, that just looks like a veneer of respectability; in reality, the position of women living there is almost worthless.
    The evidence is clear, not least that the authorities have imprisoned numerous Saudi women who have dared to speak up about human rights issues, including those who campaigned for the right to drive. In truth, while driving a car is important, it is a relatively minor issue on the scale of injustices that women face in Saudi Arabia.
    Furthermore, anyone else who criticises Riyadh’s treatment of women faces a sharp rebuke, as Canada’s ambassador found out when she was expelled from the Kingdom after Ottawa urged it to release jailed human rights activists. Far from being contrite, the Saudi government is now warning Canada to brace itself for further consequences for daring to criticise its policies and practices.In Britain — like Canada, a key ally of Saudi Arabia — former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has just likened women who wear the face covering — niqab — to “letter boxes” and “bank robbers”. Bearing in mind that more women per head of the population probably wear the niqab in Saudi and the Gulf region than anywhere else, it is reasonable to have expected Mohammed Bin Salman and his ministers to leap to the defence of Muslim women. They haven’t. The men ruling Saudi Arabia don’t really care a jot about women, least of all those who wear the niqab.
    While the men who rule in Riyadh will not tolerate any criticism of their harsh treatment of female human rights activists jailed for speaking out, they will not defend women who wear the full face veil, the niqab or burqa. It is obvious that despite now being able to drive a car, women have no real place, role or regard beyond that determined by their Saudi husbands, fathers and brothers.
    In neighbouring Qatar, the men in power need not look on in mock disgust at the government which is leading a blockade against them, for their silence is equally deafening. The same is true for the UAE, and Kuwait, other places where the niqab is ubiquitous. Are the women in these countries not worthy enough for their men to stand up for them?
    Don’t these men feel any shame, or resent the fact that a British MP with ambitions to become the next Prime Minister has insulted their mothers, wives, sisters and daughters by saying they look like letter boxes and bank robbers? Not only has he done that in his Islamophobic article in the right-wing Telegraph, but the massive ego known as Boris Johnson has also opined that he could find no “scriptural authority” in the Holy Qur’an for the niqab. What will be next from Mufti BoJo; Muslims don’t need to pray five times a day?
    The leaders in the Arab world continue to say nothing in the face of such attacks on Muslim women. Across the Atlantic, meanwhile, a similar silence follows Donald Trump’s previous endorsement of Johnson as a future British leader.
    In Britain itself, there has been a fierce backlash, with the former minister being called upon to apologise. His party leader, Prime Minister Theresa May, has said that he had “caused offence, and “women should be allowed to wear the burka if they choose to do so.” Former Attorney General Dominic Grieve MP said that he will resign if Johnson becomes Conservative Party leader.
    British Muslim individuals and groups have also called for action. Not without reason, they accuse Johnson of promoting Islamophobia and fuelling the potential for hate crimes, of which visibly Muslim women bear the brunt.In his article, Johnson was actually opposing the ban on face veils introduced by Denmark, but he wrote that he felt “fully entitled” to expect women visiting his surgery to remove face coverings just as they should in schools and universities if a student “turns up… looking like a bank robber”.
    He agrees with those who say that “the burka is oppressive” and “that it is weird and bullying to expect women to cover their faces… and I would go further and say that it is absolutely ridiculous that people should choose to go around looking like letter boxes.”

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *