King Abdullah’s move gained the  praise of the world media that considered it a small step towards ending  different forms of discrimination against women in the Islamic kingdom.
 In contrast to the image of women’s conditions in Saudi Arabia widely  propagated in the world, they are not as bad as some people might think.  It is true that women are deprived of the right to drive their own  cars, but they still enjoy freedom of movement in the city, having  private drivers or a male relative drives them. 
 It is no joke  that some Saudi men have been calling for allowing women to drive their  own cars so as to lighten the men’s load in driving their daughters,  sisters and wives to universities and shopping centres etc.
 Most importantly, Saudi girls enjoy better chances of education up to  university level than in many other oriental societies and form up to 58  per cent of college graduates.
 This reforming trend has started to influence the Saudi women  themselves as they have become more willing to express their demands and  reject some social traditions that have no grounds in Islam, such as  being dressed in black from head to toe.
 Because of its  extremely hot weather, the women of Mecca and Medina dressed in white  during the early days of Islam. However, the extremist Wahabbi clerics  who are determined to keep Saudi women in shackles, have forced women to  dress in black.
 Once, a Saudi woman asked her husband why he  chose a white car instead of the elegant black one. To her surprise, he  answered that in that desert climate they are living at it is not  appropriate for the car to be black! 
 The woman immediately  wondered how is it that men realise the adverse effects of sun and  extreme heat (absorbed by black and reflected by white) on metal cars  painted black, but not on their wives and daughters, who are made of  flesh and blood, in being forced to wear black?!
 King  Abdullah’s recent decision to allow women to enter political life might  also be the start of their getting out of wearing black, which is  intended to marginalise their role in the society.
 These  radical change in the Wahabbi practice makes one wonder how it will  reflect on other countries deeply influenced by this extremist Islamic  ideology that Saudi Arabia has been exporting to many other Muslim  countries in the region, such as Pakistan and even Egypt.
 Pakistan has enjoyed the support of Saudi Arabia since its existence as  an Islamic state and has been greatly influenced by the Saudi extremist  vision of Islam.
 In both countries, India and Pakistan,  girls suffer from different forms of discrimination not only in the  chances they have of education and health care but even in having a  chance of life in the first place.
 In India for example, a  recent survey warned of the growing trend of the Indian women to abort  pregnancies if they suspect the foetus is female. Accordingly, the ratio  of girls to boys has dropped in India from 933 per 1,000 in 2001 to 914  per 1,000 in 2011.
 The survey, which was recently published  in the Daily Telegraph, revealed that Indian girls with heart disease  are being denied treatment by parents who prefer to spend money on sons  and/or fear surgery will harm their daughters' marriage prospects.
 They fear any surgery will leave scars, which will cause "matrimonial  problems" later. "Parents would not mind, if the girl dies due to such  disease," Dr Amal Kumar Banerjee, the former president of the  Cardiological Society of India, told the British newspaper.
 The Indian women’s rights activist Flavia Agnes commented on the survey  saying: "The bias is at every stage. First, the parents kill their  [daughters] even before the girl is born. If she is allowed to live, the  girl gets less attention when it comes to primary healthcare, food,  schooling, love and is always seen as a burden".
 Examples of  discrimination against women and different forms of abuse could be  found in many societies of the world whether in Muslim or non-Muslim  societies or in poor or even rich countries such as the domestic  violence recorded against women in the West.
 However, what  people ignore is that the divine religions, mainly Islam, came to end  this state of inequality and discrimination against women.