Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saudi Teen's Flight Has Implications For Saudi Women Left Behind: Analysis

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2019 08:44 PM

    OTTAWA — Canada's acceptance of a Saudi Arabian teenager seeking asylum is sparking debate within the country about loosening laws restricting women's freedom, but also a backlash that could initially repress more women, analysts say.


    The Trudeau government's decision to accept 18-year-old Rahaf Mohammed Alqunun as a refugee from Saudi Arabia is stoking internal discussion over loosening her home country's controversial guardianship laws that give men control over women's lives.


    But experts say that slow march to reform could also be impeded by conservative families that will curtail their daughters' freedom even more in light of Alqunun's high-profile dash to freedom.


    Alqunun won global attention last week when she fled her family while visiting Kuwait and flew to Bangkok, Thailand.


    She barricaded herself in an airport hotel and launched a Twitter campaign outlining allegations of abuse against her relatives, accusations her family has denied.


    She arrived in Toronto on Saturday after Canada agreed to a United Nations request to accept her as a refugee.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal Tax Changes Come Into Effect As New Year Begins

    Federal Tax Changes Come Into Effect As New Year Begins
    The new year brings with it tax changes at the federal level that will affect just about every Canadian, as well as small businesses.

    Federal Tax Changes Come Into Effect As New Year Begins

    Emails Reveal How Ottawa Sought To Explain PTSD Treatment For Man Who Killed Cop

    Emails Reveal How Ottawa Sought To Explain PTSD Treatment For Man Who Killed Cop
    Newly released documents offer a glimpse into how high-level government officials grappled to respond to the revelation that Veterans Affairs 

    Emails Reveal How Ottawa Sought To Explain PTSD Treatment For Man Who Killed Cop

    Cabinet Oks Plan For Mint To Craft Special Toonies To Mark D-Day Anniversary

    Cabinet Oks Plan For Mint To Craft Special Toonies To Mark D-Day Anniversary
    OTTAWA — The Royal Canadian Mint is creating two commemorative coins to mark the 75th anniversary of D-Day.

    Cabinet Oks Plan For Mint To Craft Special Toonies To Mark D-Day Anniversary

    The Daring Life And Unexplained Death Of B.C.'s 'Treehouse Mike'

    The 37-year-old — known as "Treehouse Mike" — died on July 26 while on a wingsuit flight in Switzerland.

    The Daring Life And Unexplained Death Of B.C.'s 'Treehouse Mike'

    Love On Borrowed Time: Cancer Patients Find Romance Despite Terminal Prognosis

    It could have been a meet-cute in a romantic comedy between a man and a "mutant."

    Love On Borrowed Time: Cancer Patients Find Romance Despite Terminal Prognosis

    Daycare Operator Karen Wang Wins Liberal Nomination In Burnaby South

    The federal Liberal party has selected the owner of a daycare business as its challenger against NDP leader Jagmeet Singh in an upcoming byelection in British Columbia.

    Daycare Operator Karen Wang Wins Liberal Nomination In Burnaby South