November 29, 2015

​Saudi women begin campaigning in municipal polls for first time

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Sunday 29 Nov 2015 - 22:22 Makkah mean time-17-2-1437

Riyadh (IINA) - Saudi female candidates running for municipal councils have begun campaigning in elections, marking the first time women are allowed to vote and contest polls in the Kingdom.
Around 865 women are among 6,140 Saudis standing in the local elections due to be held on December 12, according to official figures. Two thirds of seats at the Kingdom's 284 councils are up for grabs. The other third of members will be appointed by the government. Women's participation in the polls, the third of their kind in the Kingdom, was decreed in 2011 by the-then King Abdullah.
Women standing for municipal councils are prohibited from holding rallies attended by men, an electoral official said on Sunday. "The female candidate can only communicate with the electorate via a TV circuit," spokesman for the official election commission Jadeeh al-Qahtani said in a tweet. "A spokesman for her can communicate with men on her behalf." Contenders from both sexes are also barred from displaying their pictures in public during the 12-day campaigning, AlJazeera reported.
The restrictions are expected to prompt contestants, mainly women, to rely on social media to reach potential voters. Aljazi al-Hossaini, a candidate in the capital, said she had hoped to set up a campaign tent in Riyadh's Diriyah area. "When I asked the man to give permission for his land ... he refused," she told the AFP news agency.
Like other contenders, Hossaini plans to focus online, and has her own website. In the Red Sea city of Jeddah, Sameera Abdullah al-Shamat was also relying on Twitter, Instagram and other internet forums widely used in the kingdom. "My daughter and two sons are running my campaign," said Shamat, a charity worker. The country's first municipal elections were held in 2005, followed by another vote in 2011. In both cases, only men were allowed to participate.
HA/IINA

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