Disadvantages of women in Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia economically developed into the country in recent years. However, in terms of society, women in Saudi Arabia continue to face the difficulties of lack of rights and privileges in life. With strong traditions and laws, women in Saudi Arabia are forced to suffer without freedom. As a result, women in Saudi Arabia must face the limits of their daily lives, as it is hindered to do certain things, such as deciding to drive or divorce, by the laws and Islamic traditions.
In Saudi Arabian culture, feminine honesty and special life is different from men. As a woman in Saudi Arabia, I ask for a guardian. My work calls for going to various places in Saudi Arabia. During my business trip, I always take my husband or my brother. They do not return anything - they just want to stay with me. In 2008, Rowdha Yousef and other Saudi women issued a petition that "my parents know what is best for me" and gathered over 5,000 signatures. The petition defended the current situation and demands that activists who requested "gender equality in a mixed environment" should be punished.
A Saudi Arabian woman working in the neighboring United Arab Emirates was arrested while entering Saudi Arabia in 2015. She received her passport from her and was forced to wait at the border of the United Arab Emirates without food and water. She insists that her UAE driver's license is valid in all countries of the GCC, but Saudi Arabian border authorities refuse to admit its legitimacy. Saudi media is attacking Jews with books, news articles, mosques, and what some people call anti-Jewish satire. Government officials in Saudi Arabia and religious leaders from various countries often advertise to inherit the Jewish conspiracy to the public and as a proof of their argument, the fact that the eldest Zion Ewon Protocol has been published and is quoted often
In 2012, the Saudi Arabian government implemented a new policy to help law enforcement agencies restrict women. Under the new policy, even when Saudi Arabian men travel with their parents, they will receive a text message on their mobile phone every time a woman under surveillance leaves. Saudi Arabian feminist activist Manal al-Sharif says, as follows. "His technique was used to delay late women's being imprisoned." The name is Fatima Mansur, her husband Mansour was happily married, but her father (now I have died) approved marriage.
In February 2017, Saudi Arabia appointed the first woman to the head of the Saudi Securities Exchange. As of 2018, two women served as ministers at the Saudi Arabian government. Other domestic reforms include important regulations restricting the power of religious police, establishment of national comedy programs hosting comedy programs, professional wrestling competitions, and monster truck meetings. Further cultural development is the first public ritual singer in Saudi Arabia, the recruitment of women at the first Saudi Arabia stadium, and the increase of incoming women.