RECENT STORIES

  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jul 20, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    Saudi women will soon drive to Subaru and deliver their petition. Can they add your name?

    This week, a group of Saudi women are once again defying the driving ban -- this time to drive to Saudi Subaru and hand-deliver their Change.org petition asking the company to stop selling cars in a country where women are forbidden to drive.

    The effort will expose these brave women to tremendous personal risk: Since Saudi women launched their right-to-drive campaign on June 17, threats against women activists -- in mosques, on the street, and in the media -- have been growing at a scary pace. But it's a cause they believe in.

    More than 50,000 people around the world have already signed the petition to reinforce Saudi women’s resolve and courage -- and remind Saudi Arabia and Subaru that the world is watching.

    Read More »
  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jul 19, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    High Representative and European Commission Vice President Catherine Ashton formally responds to Saudi women’s Change.org campaigns asking her to support for Saudi women’s right to drive; calls on Saudi Arabia to implement UN anti-discrimination convention.

    The European Union’s foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton has called on Saudi Arabia to implement an international women’s rights convention in a letter to Saudi women fighting for the right to drive.

    The letter, signed July 6 and received by Saudi Women for Driving on Wednesday, directly calls on Saudi Arabia to implement the UN Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women, a rare statement of criticism for such a senior diplomat.

    Read More »
  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jul 06, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    Versace turns off its Facebook wall to fan posts after a group of activists led by the Clean Clothes Campaign ask the luxury Italian fashion house to stop using a highly dangerous garment production method which gives Versace jeans a ‘worn’ look.

    The Italian fashion house Gianni Versace has de-activated its Facebook wall after activists posted dozens of messages demanding that the company ban sandblasting, a technique used to give jeans a used look which is highly dangerous to workers.

    The process of sandblasting involves workers firing sand under high pressure at jeans and has been known to kill workers in garment producing countries like Turkey and Bangladesh, where jean sandblasting is done manually. The large amounts of silica dust generated during sandblasting can cause silicosis, a potentially lethal pulmonary disease, as workers inhale tiny particles of silica.

    A number of major brands, such as Levi's, H&M, C&A and Gucci, have already abolished sandblasted jeans in their collections. However, Versace has taken no action despite repeated calls from international labor rights groups like the Clean Clothes Campaign for them to do so.

    Read More »
  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jul 01, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    Activists launch Change.org campaign after State Department spokesperson refuses to condemn the detentions of women for driving in Saudi Arabia.

    Women’s rights activists are up in arms after the U.S. State Department refused to condemn the detention of Saudi women arrested and detained for driving.

    Mark C. Toner, a State Department spokesperson, was repeatedly questioned during a State Department briefing on Thursday about the United States’ position on the arrest and detention of a number of Saudi women for driving earlier this week. In response, Mr. Toner refused to condemn such detentions, depicting the arrests as an internal issue.

    When a reporter asked “What do you make of the fact that the Saudi religious police are running around, plucking women out of cars?” the State Department spokesperson replied by framing the issue as “an internal matter for Saudi Arabia.”

    When a reporter asked “Do you think that it’s a good thing that the Saudi religious police are taking women out of cars when they’re driving and arresting them?” the State Department spokesperson replied “This is an issue that Saudi Arabians are grappling with.”

    Finally, when a reporter asked “You won’t come out and say that it’s a bad thing for the religious police to be detaining women who are driving?” the spokesperson replied. “I’ve given you the details as I know them, which is that they were detained and then later released. They were never formally charged. So I don’t want to pump too much air into this.”

    Read More »
  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jun 28, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    Female driver surrounded by four police cars in dramatic, nighttime arrest; Saudi Women for Driving responds with emergency call on Change.org to free those arrested.

    Saudi Arabian police arrested five women for driving on Tuesday for the first time since dozens of women began testing the ban on driving on June 17, according to reports by local Saudi media.

    In one incident, first reported on Facebook by Saudi journalist Jamal Banoon, four young women driving in the Dorat Al Aroos area of Jeddah were arrested by agents of the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, Saudi Arabia’s religious police. The women were taken to a criminal investigations unit. In a second incident that night a woman driving in downtown Jeddah was suddenly surrounded by four police cars and taken into custody for driving. Her car was confiscated, according to the conservative Saudi news site SABQ. It is not clear whether or not the five women are still in detention, and there have been no reports of their whereabouts since.

    The incidents mark a significant departure from the hands-off approach Saudi police have taken since women’s rights activists launched a nationwide right-to-drive campaign on June 17.

    Read More »
  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jun 22, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    Top EU diplomat responds to Saudi women’s Change.org campaigns asking her to publicly declare support for Saudi women’s right to drive.

    The European Union’s foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton publicly declared her support for Saudi women’s right to drive campaigns late Wednesday after more than 7,000 people in all EU states joined a Change.org campaign calling on her to stand with the Saudi women.

    In a statement released by a spokesperson for the High Representative and European Commission Vice President, HRVP Ashton described the Saudi women fighting for the right to drive as “courageous.”

    “The EU supports people who stand up for their right to equal treatment, wherever they are. The Saudi women who are taking to the road are exercising their right to demand that equality. They are courageous and have the High Representative's support.”

    The statement came one day after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton publicly praised the Saudi women’s right to drive campaigns:

    "What these women are doing is brave, and what they are seeking is right... I'm moved by it [the campaign] and I support them."

    Ashton’s support concludes a month of campaigning by Saudi Women for Driving, a coalition of leading Saudi women’s rights activists, bloggers and academics, which directly called on both HRVP Ashton and Clinton to make a public statement in support of Saudi women’s right to drive on Change.org, the world’s fastest-growing platform for social change.

    Read More »
  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jun 22, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    Internationally renowned Chinese artist and dissident Ai Weiwei was released from a Beijing prison late Wednesday night.

    The news comes after more than 140,000 people in 175 countries joined an unprecedented Change.org campaign by leading global art institutions - including the Guggenheim Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, London’s Tate Modern and the Association of Art Museum Directors - calling for the artist’s immediate release.

    “This campaign has been quite a ride: in less than three months leading global art institutions and artists from all over the world came together to recruit more than 140,000 supporters in 175 countries,” said Ben Rattray, the founder of Change.org. “Their remarkable success led foreign hackers to launch a highly sophisticated cyber-attack on Change.org designed to prevent people around the world from simply voicing their opinion. But despite the challenges, Change.org is about empowering anyone, anywhere to call for action on the issues that matter to them, and it has been an honor to provide a platform for this inspiring campaign.”

    Read More »
  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jun 21, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    Top U.S. diplomat responds to Saudi women’s campaigns on Change.org asking her to publicly declare support for Saudi women’s right to drive.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton publicly declared her support for Saudi women’s right to drive campaigns on Tuesday.

    "What these women are doing is brave, and what they are seeking is right," Clinton said. “I'm moved by it [the campaign] and I support them."

    The statement comes after Saudi Women for Driving, a coalition of leading Saudi women’s rights activists, bloggers and academics, directly called on Secretary Clinton to make a public statement in support of Saudi women’s right to drive on Change.org, the world’s fastest-growing platform for social change.

    On Monday State spokesperson Victoria Nuland responded to the Saudi women’s calls by saying Clinton was engaged in “quiet diplomacy” and had raised the issue privately with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal.

    Saudi Women for Driving pushed back on that approach, telling Clinton that “quiet diplomacy is not what we need right now.”

    Read More »
  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jun 21, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    Saudi Women for Driving, a coalition of leading Saudi women’s rights activists, bloggers and academics campaigning for the right to drive, sent the following response to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday.

    Dear Secretary Clinton,

    We trust that you have received our letters, dated June 3 and June 20, asking you to make a public statement supporting our right to drive.

    At yesterday’s State Department briefing, spokesperson Victoria Nuland said [transcript below] you have been advocating for our right to drive through “quiet diplomacy,” specifically by speaking about it with HE Prince Saud Al-Faisal on Friday. “There are times when it makes sense to do so publicly and there are times for quiet diplomacy," she said.

    We greatly appreciate your efforts to raise the status of women with his excellency, and your many years of advocacy on behalf of women all over the world. However, given the events of the past month, we are disappointed by this approach.

    Secretary Clinton: quiet diplomacy is not what we need right now. What we need is for you, personally, to make a strong, simple and public statement supporting our right to drive.

    Read More »
  • by Benjamin Joffe-Walt · Jun 20, 2011 · HUMAN RIGHTS

    Saudi Women for Driving, a coalition of leading Saudi women’s rights activists, bloggers and academics campaigning for the right to drive, sent the following letter to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Monday. A similar letter was sent to Clinton’s EU counterpart Catherine Ashton.

    Dear Secretary Clinton,

    On June 3 we wrote a letter asking you, our friend, to make a public statement supporting our right to drive. More than 20,000 Americans in all 50 states have expressed support for that call.

    Many of us have met you personally during your decades-long journey as a champion of women’s rights all over the world, and we expected our call to be met with a warm, supportive response.

    Unfortunately, that has not happened, and we write to express our deep concern over the US government's public silence on the issue of Saudi women's right to drive.

    Three days ago, on June 17, more Saudi women drove a car than ever before. But as we launch the largest women’s rights movement in Saudi history, where are you when we need you most? In the context of the Arab Spring and US commitments to support women’s rights, is this not something the United States’ top diplomat would want to publicly support?

    Read More »
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AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY

Benjamin Joffe-Walt
New York, NY

Benjamin Joffe-Walt is a Change.org editor. An award-winning journalist, he has written extensively on human rights issues in the US, Africa and the Middle East. His work has appeared in the Economist, BBC, Guardian, New Statesman, Boston Globe, San Francisco Chronicle, Al-Quds newspaper and Arab News. In a prior life he worked as a paramedic and forest firefighter and can balance various objects on his nose.