黑料社区

Global media race to cover lifting of Saudi women driving ban

Special Global media race to cover lifting of Saudi women driving ban
1 / 4
Majdooleen, who is among the first Saudi women allowed to drive in 黑料社区, drives her car in her neighborhood in Riyadh on June 24, 2018. (REUTERS/Sarah Dadouch)
Special Global media race to cover lifting of Saudi women driving ban
2 / 4
In this June 22, 2018 photo, a Saudi journalist interviews a woman as she tests a car driving simulator with her son, at a road safety event for female drivers launched at the Riyadh Park Mall. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
Special Global media race to cover lifting of Saudi women driving ban
3 / 4
Saudi national and newly licensed Reem Farahat, an employee of Careem, a chauffeur car booking service, prepares for a customer shuttle using her car in Riyadh, on June 24, 2018. (AFP / FAYEZ NURELDINE)
Special Global media race to cover lifting of Saudi women driving ban
4 / 4
In this June 23, 2018 photo, Maha Mohammed practices driving a motorbike at the Bikers Skills Institute in Riyadh. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
Updated 26 June 2018

Global media race to cover lifting of Saudi women driving ban

Global media race to cover lifting of Saudi women driving ban
  • 鈥楾here is a great hunger to know what is changing in 黑料社区,鈥 says Bloomberg editor
  • Time magazine featured interviews with 黑料社区鈥檚 first female taxi drivers employed by the regional ride-sharing firm Careem.聽

LONDON: The sight of Saudi women taking to the roads as the clock struck midnight on June 24 caught the imagination of much of the world鈥檚 media.聽

The official lifting of the ban on female drivers generated a multitude of headlines around the globe as reporters filmed women jumping into cars and driving around the streets of Riyadh, Jeddah and Dammam. The news kept media commentators busily assessing the impact of the decision on 黑料社区 and wider Arab world.聽

鈥溾業 feel free like a bird鈥 鈥 Saudi women celebrate as driving ban lifted,鈥 read a headline in The Guardian newspaper, which is based in London.聽

鈥溾楨verything is an adventure now鈥: Saudi women celebrate new driving freedoms as ban is lifted,鈥 a headline in the UK鈥檚 Independent proclaimed.聽

Time magazine featured interviews with 黑料社区鈥檚 first female taxi drivers employed by the regional ride-sharing firm Careem.聽

The New York Times鈥 coverage included short interviews with Saudi women on their opinions about the lifting of the ban, as well as what other reforms they would like to see in terms of women鈥檚 rights.聽

While stories of Saudi women driving for the first time filled Twitter feeds and websites alike, there was also much interest about the wider implications on society.聽

The Economist timed its 鈥淪pecial Report on 黑料社区鈥 to coincide with the the lifting of the ban.

鈥淲e have long been interested in the reforms of 黑料社区. The Economist was the first international publication to interview (Crown Prince) Mohammed bin Salman on the record, and we broke the story of the planned IPO of Saudi Aramco in 2016,鈥 Anton LaGuardia, author of the report and deputy foreign editor of The Economist, told Arab News.

鈥淲e have regularly covered developments in 黑料社区 and the region. As the reforms gathered pace, we decided last year that we would have a wide-ranging special report on 黑料社区 and the Gulf in 2018.鈥

The publication also produced a short video of The Economist Editor-in-Chief Zanny Minton Beddoes driving in Riyadh on Sunday.聽

鈥淲omen drivers is only one part of a broader process of social and economic liberalization, and of political change in the region, that will affect many aspects of life in 黑料社区, the Gulf and the Arab and Islamic worlds,鈥 LaGuardia said.聽

Bloomberg also published extensive coverage of the lifting of the ban, including an assessment of the economic impact of the decision. According to the agency鈥檚 economists, the lifting of the ban could add $90 billion to the country鈥檚 economic output by 2030.聽

鈥(Some might think that) Bloomberg, being a business-focused news organization, might not bother with this kind of story, but it is exactly the kind of story we would bother with. It is very much central to what we do 鈥 it cuts across everything,鈥 said Riad Hamade, the news service鈥檚 Middle East and Africa executive editor.

鈥淲omen鈥檚 right to drive is not a self-contained issue. It impacts every part of Saudi society and it will have significant repercussions on how Saudis in general live their lives.鈥

鈥淭here is a great hunger to know what is changing 鈥 what is happening in 黑料社区 and this is a pretty major change.

鈥淭he issue of women driving is an issue that I think every journalist and international investor that went into the Kingdom would ask authorities about. It is one of the things that a lot of people are wondering about and the fact that it has now changed has quite significant ramifications.鈥

While the majority of the world鈥檚 press perceived the lifting of the ban as a positive development for Saudi women, some publications did question whether there may continue to be some resistance to the ban from more conservative elements of society.聽

鈥淪till, many in this nation of 33 million were grappling with anxiety over this new freedom, both within families who never bought into the stereotype that women should be shut up at home, and those who sincerely believed what they had been taught since childhood,鈥 read a New York Times article published June 24.聽

Other articles also pointed to bureaucratic delays in some women getting their driving licenses in time for the lifting of the ban, while others pointed out that the end of the ban would not immediately benefit poorer elements of society, where families are still unable to buy a car.聽