Women
Beware: Saudia Arabia Charged with Shaping
Global Standards for Women's Equality
By
Medea Benjamin
April
28, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- It’s hard to sink to a greater depth of
hypocrisy than voting Saudi Arabia onto a UN
Commission charged with promoting women’s
equality and empowerment. And yet, on April
23rd, that is precisely what the UN Economic and
Social Council did. Of the 54 countries on the
Council, 47 of them agreed to add Saudi Arabia
to a four-year term on the UN Commission on the
Status of Women.
How did
the US Ambassador to the UN and the democratic
champions of Europe vote? The ballot was secret,
and is it any wonder that the UN representatives
refuse to reveal their votes? What is
undeniable, however, is that the Saudis could
not have received 47 votes without support from
the Western democracies.
The
Saudi regime is notorious for its abysmal
treatment of women. Outside the home, women are
forced to wear an abaya, a loose-fitting black
cloak that conceals the shape of their bodies,
and a hijab, or headscarf, to cover their hair.
The fundamentalist dress code is enforced by
zealous religious police who fine and beat women
who dare to violate the code. Saudi Arabia is
the only country in the world to ban women from
driving, a practice that severely limits women’s
independence and autonomy.
Saudi
Arabia is unquestionably the most
gender-segregated society in the world. The
government enforces sex segregation in virtually
all workplaces except hospitals, and fines
businesses that fail to comply. In food outlets,
including US chains such as McDonalds or KFC,
all lines and eating areas are separated to keep
unrelated men and women apart. The men’s section
is usually the airy, front section, while the
women and children are relegated to the back,
shielded from public view. The majority of
public buildings have separate entrances for men
and women; some even ban women from entering.
The
most oppressive aspect of life for Saudi women
is the strict guardianship system. This system
requires every female, from birth to death, to
have a male guardian who controls her ability to
travel, study, work, marry or even seek certain
forms of medical attention.
Saudi
women campaigning for women’s rights denounced
the addition of Saudi Arabia to the UN
Commission. “Allowing this oppressive regime to
join a commission designed to empower women
makes me feel personally violated and invisible
and it is demoralizing for us as activists,” an
anonymous Saudi woman seeking asylum in the
United States told me. “It sends a message that
for the international community, Saudi wealth
and power are more important than women’s
lives.”
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Saudi
Arabia is probably the worst country in the
world to be put on a women’s commission shaping
global standards on gender equality, not only
because of its treatment of Saudi women but also
because the regime uses its oil wealth to export
misogyny abroad. Saudi Arabia spreads its
reactionary version of Islam through the
thousands of mosques and schools it builds
overseas, as well as through the funding of
extremist groups like ISIS and Al Qaeda
affiliates. Wherever Saudi influence appears
around the world, women lose rights and
autonomy.
For
Saudi Arabia, a top U.S. ally, a position on the
Women’s Commission is a way to further whitewash
its image and keep the organization from shining
a spotlight on Saudi abuses. This was the same
rationale for the regime to seek, and obtain, a
seat on the UN Human Rights Council. While such
positions may burnish the image of the Saudi
regime, they tarnish the image of the UN itself,
showing that money takes precedence over the
principles of human rights and equality that the
United Nations was created to uphold.
One can only imagine the suggestions the Saudi
reps will come up with when addressing the UN
Commission’s mission to assess the challenges to
gender equality. It is doubtful they will ever
suggest that the Saudi regime itself, and its
support from Western allies, is a global
obstacle that women must struggle to overcome.
So it is up to women everywhere to
call for the Saudis to be kicked off the
Commission so
that it can be a space truly dedicated to the
empowerment of women.
Medea Benjamin (medea@globalexchange.org),is
an American political activist, best known for
co-founding Code Pink and, along with activist
and author Kevin Danaher, the fair trade
advocacy group Global Exchange. Medea is
author of a forthcoming book on Saudi Arabia,
Kingdom of the Unjust.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.