WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump speaks in the Rose Garden of the White House on Thursday, before signing an executive order aimed at easing an IRS rule limiting political activity for churches. - AP

BEIRUT: A move by Saudi Arabia to give women more control over their life choices by further relaxing a male guardian system was tentatively welcomed yesterday as another step for women in the conservative kingdom. Saudi Arabia is well known as one of the world's most gender-segregated nations, where women live under the supervision of a male guardian, cannot drive, and in public must wear head-to-toe black garments. Women need approval from a man to travel, study and get some health treatments.

However local media outlets reported this week that the king of Saudi Arabia has issued an order allowing women to benefit from government services such as education and healthcare without getting the consent of a male guardian. This means women could, in some circumstances, study and access hospital treatment, work in the public and private sector and represent themselves in court without consent of a male guardian, said Maha Akeel, a women's rights campaigner and a director at Jeddah-based Organization of Islamic Cooperation. "Now at least it opens the door for discussion on the guardian system," Akeel told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. "Women are independent and can take care of themselves."

This comes as the latest in a series of moves in Saudi Arabia to include women more in the workforce as the kingdom moves to diversify its economy and cut reliance on oil. The system of make guardianship, which requires women to obtain permission from a guardian - father, husband, or son - to travel, study or marry is an impediment to realizing women's rights, say rights groups. "Male guardianship is un-Islamic and humiliating for women," said Akeel. "Some (men) take advantage of this male guardianship for their own benefit and abuse it." - Reuters