Ladies, start your engines.
Saudi Arabia’s king issued a decree on Tuesday allowing women to drive, which would end a longstanding ban on female motorists in the ultra-conservative country.
The Saudi Ministry of the Interior said the decree means women will be allowed to drive in 10 months. Saudi Arabia is the only country in the world that prohibits women drivers.
The state-run Saudi Press Agency and state TV reported the news late Tuesday evening local time, saying a royal order was issued for both men and women to be issued drivers’ licenses. A committee will be formed to look into how to implement the new order.
U.S. State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert told reporters that the department was pleased with the announcement and that lifting the ban is a good sign.
Saudi Arabia has consistently been ranked as one of the worst countries for gender equality. Women there are forbidden to wear clothes or make-up that “show off their beauty,” must limit the amount of time they spend with men who aren’t family members and are not allowed to use public swimming pools.
Saudi women’s rights activists have been pushing for the right to drive for decades, saying it represents their larger struggle for equal rights under the law. Saudi women remain largely under the whim of male relatives due to guardianship laws.


In May of 2011, prominent Saudi women’s rights activist Manal al-Sharif was arrested and spent more than a week in jail for getting behind the wheel after she posted a YouTube video of herself driving. But that arrest inspired a campaign a month later in which around 70 women got behind the wheel.
Then thousands of women signed a petition in 2013 to allow women to drive.
Since 2015, King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud and his young son and heir, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, have already been testing the waters, allowing women into the country’s main stadium in the capital, Riyadh, for national day celebrations earlier this month. The stadium had previously been reserved for all-male crowds to watch sporting events.
In 2015, the year King Salman’s reign began, Saudi women were allowed for the first time to vote in local council elections and stood in as candidates.
And in November of 2016, Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who does not hold an official government position, urged that the ban be lifted, saying “Stop the debate: Time for women to drive.”