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Let women drive, Saudi prince urges

A prominent Saudi prince and business tycoon has added his voice to the debate over women’s rights in his country, urging it to abandon its driving ban for women.

“Stop the debate,” the prince, Alwaleed bin Talal, wrote on Twitter. “It’s time for women to drive.”

In a  four-page letter  posted on his personal website, he argued that “it is high time that Saudi women started driving their cars,” and he couched his views in economic terms, noting that foreign drivers are typically paid 3,800 riyals, or about $1,000, a month to shuttle women around.

 The cost, he argued, contributes to capital outflows and strains household budgets at a time when Saudi Arabia is trying to shift its economy away from reliance on oil.

Prince Alwaleed’s statement seemed unlikely to affect policy.

The driving ban is enforced by Saudi Arabia’s religious police, and it has been the occasional target of protests. Women were allowed to vote and run local elections last December for the first time. But they have a low rate of participation in the work force, a long-term problem for the kingdom as it tries to diversify its economy and rely less on foreign workers.

Prince Alwaleed is not in the government and does not speak for it, but as one of the world’s wealthiest investors he enjoys a higher profile than most other Saudi royals. A billionaire, he is particularly active in the hotel and construction industries and has extensive holdings in the United States and Europe.

Ending the ban would allow the kingdom to eventually “dispense with” the services of an estimated one million drivers and would stimulate the economy by allowing women to work by driving other women who did not feel comfortable behind the wheel.

He added that the fatwas, or religious rulings, used to justify the bans were “the product of their times” but acknowledged that the decision was “clearly and intrinsically political.”

 He also said that he would support restrictions even if the ban were lifted, like prohibiting driving outside city limits or requiring women drivers “to carry smartphones to be used when needed.”