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Women vote for first time in Saudi elections: ‘We have been waiting so long...’

The last major nation on Earth to not give women the right to vote changes its laws, allowing female suffrage for local council elections.

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A Saudi woman casts her ballot at a polling center during municipal elections in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Photo: AP
Associated Press

Nearly 100 years after women won the right to vote in Western nations, Saudi Arabia has allowed women to cast ballots in local municipal council elections in hundreds of locations.

Mai Sharif, 32, was the first person to vote at a women-only polling center in downtown Riyadh. The all-female team of election volunteers applauded as she dropped her ballot in the box.

“We have been waiting so long,” Sharif said.

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She and others hope the election opens the door to other reforms, such as allowing women to travel outside of the country without permission from a male relative. But they also acknowledge that in this Muslim kingdom dominated by the Saudi monarchy and an ultra-conservative clerical establishment, change is likely to come slowly.

“Some people don’t trust women,” Sharif said. “But as we vote and as we win, we will change those ideas.”

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