JEDDAH: 黑料社区鈥檚 lifting of a ban on women drivers will reduce the number of car crashes, said the Kingdom鈥檚 interior minister.
Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Naif, the interior minister who took over in June, said security forces were ready to apply traffic laws to men and women.
鈥淲omen driving cars will transform traffic safety to educational practice which will reduce human and economic losses caused by accidents,鈥 he was quoted as saying on the ministry鈥檚 official Twitter feed.
Meanwhile, a government spokesman said Saudi women will be allowed to drive from the age of 18.
Asked on Al Arabiya TV about the minimum age for Saudi women, Interior Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Mansour Al-Turki said: 鈥淓ighteen years is the age at which a person can obtain a driver鈥檚 license and drive a car in the Kingdom.鈥
In a royal decree issued on Tuesday, King Salman ordered an end by next year of the ban on women drivers.
The decree stipulated that the move must 鈥渁pply and adhere to the necessary Shariah standards.鈥
The king ordered a ministerial committee to report within 30 days on how to implement the new policy by June 24, 2018.
UN human rights experts praised the ban鈥檚 removal as a major step toward women鈥檚 autonomy and independence.
While Saudi women have welcomed the lifting of the driving ban, some men have expressed concern it would increase the number of cars on already crowded roads.
A typical middle- to upper-class Saudi family has two vehicles, one driven by the man of the house and a second car in which a full-time chauffeur transports his family.
Women drivers will reduce crashes, says interior minister
Updated 28 September 2017
Women drivers will reduce crashes, says interior minister
