Meet Saudi Arabia's first female lawyer
- Arwa Al-Hujaili has become Saudi Arabia's first female lawyer
- Women were able to study law, but could only practice as "legal consultants"
- The move came after years of online protests from female law graduates
After three years of
petitioning the Ministry of Justice, Al-Hujaili, 25, has finally
received her registration to practice as a trainee lawyer, the first
woman to do so.
"People tell me I'm a
pioneer and I feel I need to live up to what they expect of me," says
Al-Hujaili. "There's a great sense of responsibility. From now on,
people will look at everything I do."
Al-Hujaili, who decided
on a legal career while preparing for university, graduated from King
Abdulaziz University in Jeddah in 2010 and expected to be able to
practice as a lawyer immediately.
People tell me I'm a pioneer, and I feel I need to live up to what they expect of me
Arwa al-Hujaili
Arwa al-Hujaili
But much to her
frustration, she has spent three years in a professional no-man's land,
able to work as "legal consultant" but not officially recognized as a
lawyer.
Universities in Saudi
Arabia began taking female law students in 2005 and the first graduates
completed their studies in 2008. But the optimism soon wore off when
female graduates found themselves unable to gain registration to
practice.
Many of Al-Hujaili's
classmates, frustrated by the lack of progress in Saudi Arabia, left the
country to work abroad. But Al-Hujaili stayed in her hometown of Jeddah
and continued to apply for registration.
In the meantime, some of her contemporaries began an online campaign to push for change, including a Facebook group called IAM A LAWYER a Twitter campaign and YouTube videos from women arguing their right to practice.
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In October last year,
after accepting a petition with 3,000 signatures submitted by a group of
female law graduates, King Abdullah announced that women would be
allowed to register as lawyers. However, the Ministry of Justice still
wasn't processing applications from women.
A Saudi city exclusively for women
"I kept on following up, but they wouldn't give me an answer either way," says Al-Hujaili.
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A friend and vocal
campaigner, Hanouf Al-Hazzaa, then wrote a newspaper article in which
she pleaded with King Abdullah to intervene.
Al-Hazzaa had been one
of Saudi Arabia's first batch of female law graduates in 2008, but had
gone to the United States to practice after becoming disillusioned with
the situation at home.
"I wrote about how
depressing the situation was, saying here we were, many of us working
for federal courts outside the Kingdom, because we had no future inside
it," says Al-Hazzaa
Two days later, the
Ministry of Justice announced they would start accepting applications
and soon afterwards Al-Hujaili's application was granted.
Now working as a trainee
lawyer and due to qualify fully in two years, Al-Hujaili hopes to
pursue a career in family law to help other Saudi women.
"Many women really need to talk to female lawyers, and I want to help those women to get their rights," she says.
Success is a nice feeling, especially when it comes after tribulation.
Arwa al-Hujaili
Arwa al-Hujaili
Al-Hujaili knows the path ahead won't always be smooth.
"The social aspect is a
very considerable one, for society to accept women lawyers, it's
something new," she says. "It will be also challenging for the judiciary
system to deal with female lawyers, but I think we can overcome these
hardships if we prove ourselves as competent lawyers."
Adam Coogle, a Middle East researcher for Human Rights Watch, agrees that challenges remain for female lawyers.
"Saudi judges have a lot
of leeway, and can remove a lawyer from a case," says Coogle. "She
might face judges rejecting her counsel or not allowing her to speak,
particularly if that judge is conservative and doesn't want women to
speak in court."
Other female lawyers are now following in Al-Hujaili's footsteps and gaining registration, although exact numbers are unclear.
For Al-Hujaili, being able to pursue a legal career at home was well worth the wait.
"Success is a nice feeling, especially when it comes after tribulation," she says.
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