Rediff.com |  Feedback  
You are here: » Rediff Home » Discussion Boards » Permalink
  
View : Single Message | Complete Thread | Read complete Discussion
Is it acceptable to all?
by Nagesh Bhagwat on Dec 03, 2007 06:02 PM   Permalink | Hide replies

I wonder if the interpretation of the Holy Quran by the Pak scholars would be acceptable to their peers in Saudi Arabia. If so, whay are women in Saudi not allowed to vote? Just an observation...

    Forward  |  Report abuse
  RE:Is it acceptable to all?
by bowler on Dec 03, 2007 06:20 PM   Permalink
a step in the right direction can be well appreciated . i hope that you are not expecting immedeate revolution as it happens only in movies.

   Forward   |   Report abuse
  RE:Is it acceptable to all?
by Sameer Bharwat on Dec 03, 2007 06:06 PM   Permalink
FYI, there are no elections in Saudi Arabia ,its is a monarchy and not a democracy . so men also are not allowed to vote there.
Get your facts right before writing something here.

   Forward   |   Report abuse
  RE:RE:Is it acceptable to all?
by Nagesh Bhagwat on Dec 03, 2007 06:12 PM   Permalink
Please read your last sentence

The Saudi Arabian municipal elections in 2005 involved 178 municipalities in Saudi Arabia and were held from 10 February to 21 April, 2005.

The first elections to be held in Saudi Arabia since the 1960s, the 2005 elections were held in three stages: the first on 10 February around the capital city of Riyadh, the second in the east and southwest on 3 March, and the third, in the north, on 21 April.

The elections were part of the Saudi government's response to progressive movements calling for political reform.

Male citizens over the age of 21 voted for half of the members of their municipal councils. On 11 October 2004, Prince Naif bin Abd al-Aziz, the Saudi Interior Minister, announced to a Kuwaiti newspaper that women would not be able to run as candidates or vote in the elections: "I do not think that women's participation is possible." Elections officials noted logistical concerns, such as the lack of separate women's voting booths and the fact that many women do not have identification cards, as well as opposition from conservative religious traditionalists. However, the government has promised that women will be voting in the next elections of 2009.



   Forward   |   Report abuse
The above message is part of the Discussion Board:
Quran wants you to vote, say scholars