Shady drivers give Asir women a ‘bumpy ride’

Author: 
HAYAT AL-GHAMDI  | ARAB NEWS
Publication Date: 
Wed, 2010-05-12 02:22

A police source told Arab News that an Indian driver had recently been arrested; he was under the influence of drugs and his passenger was a woman. He was subsequently deported. 
Drugs are not the main problem when it comes to private drivers hired to transport working women. There is the issue of khulwa (unrelated men and women being together) as well. Unfortunately, the Asir area lacks a special limousine company; the only one charges such high fares that a woman could fly from Abha to Jeddah! Women are complaining, especially businesswomen and women employees in the health and education sectors.
A Saudi woman working in the media sector said she had discovered that she was being used by one of the drivers she hired to distribute qat, a substance much used in Yemen but which is illegal in Saudi Arabia. The police at checkpoints usually look the other way when a driver is driving a woman. The woman did not know about her driver's illegal activities until she read in the newspaper that he had been arrested for smuggling qat.
Drivers advertise for customers in newspapers and posts in supermarkets and schools. They often put their phone numbers and specify that their wives accompany them so women will feel comfortable. Another Saudi woman said that such people are sometimes more dangerous than the Qat dealers. They try to convince the women that the woman in the car is the driver’s wife when, in most cases, she is not related to the driver. The women are often hired to pose as driver’s relative.
A Saudi teacher said that she had almost been the victim of one of these gangs.  She explained: “I hired an Arab driver and a woman he called his wife was present. One day, they stopped in front of their house and  insisted that I  come inside with them. I was suspicious because I scarcely know the driver or his wife. I refused as politely as I could but they insisted which made me suspicious. I asked the driver to drive me to one of the schools because I had something urgent and he insisted that he would take me after I came inside. When I insisted on going to the school, he got angry and drove me there. When I reached the school, I phoned him and asked him never to come again.” She said that she got suspicious that he might be a gang member, a possible blackmailer, working with the woman allegedly his wife.
The official spokesman for the Asir police, Col. Abdullah Al-Qarni, said that the police had arrested some of these drivers who were guilty of suspicious activities. He said  the drivers  are dangerous and families, especially women, should beware and avoid them. He said: “Either they should have a family driver or hire a car that is legitimately a business.”

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