"Now women have a voice," Awatef Marzooq told AFP after casting her ballot at a school in the capital. "I cried. This is something that we only used to see on television taking place in other countries." Despite the novel presence of female contenders, Marzooq said she picked a male candidate because of his ideas including more nurseries.
"I voted for a man, but I hope a woman will win," she said. Saudi Arabia is an absolute monarchy with some of the world's tightest restrictions on women, including a ban on driving. It was the last country to allow only men to vote, and polling stations were segregated. Outside one centre for women in Riyadh, cars driven by men arrived every few minutes with female voters dressed in black robes. Some of the women asked the media not to take their photograph before they were whisked away. Mohammed al-Shammari, who had just dropped off his daughter, a teacher, said he had encouraged her to vote.
"We want to break this barrier," he said. "As long as she has her own place and there is no mixing with men, what prevents her from voting? We support anything that does not violate sharia," he said. Among the 6,440 candidates are more than 900 women, who overcame a number of obstacles to participate in the landmark poll.
Female candidates could not directly meet any male voters during their campaigns. "This is really silly," said Sahar Hassan Nasief, a women's rights activist in the Red Sea city of Jeddah. She said men and women were already mixing to a degree in the workplace, supermarkets and other locations, although restaurants, banks and other public places include separate sections for "families" and single men. Nasief said the election campaign was "not really" fair because of the segregation and a rule against any candidates publishing their own picture.
But it "felt really good". Female voters said registration was hindered by factors including bureaucratic obstacles and a lack of transport. As a result, women account for less than 10 percent of registered voters and few, if any, female candidates are expected to be elected when results are announced Sunday.
"Even if men take all the seats, I feel we still won," said Munifa, a nurse who lives outside Hafr al-Batin city in the kingdom's north-east, where camels and sheep awaited slaughter at a celebration to follow declaration of the winners. "I have a voice and it matters. It doesn't matter if I vote for a man or a woman," said another north-eastern resident, who gave her name only as Noura, 24.
One-third of seats on Saudi Arabia's 284 councils are appointed by the municipal affairs ministry, leaving women optimistic that they will at least be assigned some of them. Some male voters said they lacked information about the female candidates. "I didn't see any woman's campaign so I won't be voting for a woman," said Mohammed al-Ghamdi, 49, in Jeddah. Ghamdi said he cast his ballot "to help establish a voting culture". According to election commission data, nearly 1.5 million people aged 18 and over were registered to vote.
This includes about 119,000 women, out of a total native Saudi population of almost 21 million. "I think social media helped promote the elections," said Mohammed Abdullah al-Kharji, deputy head of the electoral committee at King Salman Social Centre polling station in Riyadh. Polls opened at 8:00 am (0500 GMT) and closed at 5:00 pm.
Oil-rich Saudi Arabia boasts modern infrastructure of highways, skyscrapers and ever-more shopping malls. But women still face many restrictions. They require permission from male family members to travel, work or marry. Ruled by the al-Saud family of King Salman, Saudi Arabia has no elected legislature and faces intense Western scrutiny of its rights record. A slow expansion of women's rights began under Salman's predecessor Abdullah who announced four years ago that women would join the elections this year. Male-only polls were first held in 2005. "It's only a start, and it's a very good start," Nasief said. "Nothing comes easily."