---------------------------------------- no , no as American femi nazi women will stand up to the 'fifth column' invaders and rapists that are coming to the USA .Meanwhile in Europe white women are being raped and some have started wearing scarfs around their face as to not be abused by the peaceful middle eastern men that have emigrated there. And this will happen here with more frequency.Donald Trump's friend the butcher Mohammed Bin Salman is not a reformer and his despotic regime in Saudi Arabia is persecuting women and imprisoning them.
Increasing numbers of Saudi women are now seeking escape from the oppression in Saudi Arabia.
In October two Saudi women, sisters committed suicide because Saudi authorities had been informed they were seeking political asylum in the USA. "Saudi Arabian sisters whose bodies were found taped together along the Hudson River in October committed suicide, a medical examiner determined".
Recently a Saudi woman escaped from her family and was given asylum in Canada. More and more Saudi women are seeking escape.
Saudi women are treated as possessions and chattels of Saudi men.
Donald Trump and Jared Kushner are not making any evident attempt to pressure the Saudis to change the social status and independence of Saudi women.
Shahad stole her family's passports while they slept and fled for her life
Escape from Saudi ... The women who make it and the ones who don’t
Hundreds of women have tried to escape Saudi Arabia in recent years, fleeing the strict male guardianship laws that control every aspect of their lives. Four Corners follows the stories of some of the women who attempt the desperate dash for freedom.
By Sophie McNeill, Brigid Andersen and Georgina Pipe
Life in Saudi
By the time she was 14, Nourah* was thinking about escape. The young Saudi woman was on Twitter watching the Arab Spring unfold across the Middle East, bringing hopes for freedom.
“It wasn’t just for those people, it wasn’t just for those countries. For me as a young woman, that made a lot of difference and I decided when I was 14, I’m going to leave this country,” she said.
Nourah’s life was controlled by men.
Saudi Arabia’s male guardianship laws mean women need permission from their guardian — a father, brother, husband, son or uncle — for the most basic activities. They can’t travel, go to school, get a job or marry without permission. Under Saudi law, their witness statements carry half the weight of a man’s.
“Any male from my family can control my life in any way. He can make the big decisions in my life including my partner, the future of my education, even if I went to hospital he had to sign for me,” Nourah said.
For Shahad, life in Saudi included constant beatings from her father. When she complained to her mother about the abuse, her father beat them both. ...