DUBAI: A Saudi Arabia woman who pressed the government last year after she drove a vehicle in the country has filed a lawsuit against the government for refusing her a driver's license. Manal al-Sharif, the mastermind behind the Women 2 Drive campaign, sent an email from the organization to Bloomberg news agency detailing her effort to obtain a driver's license in the ultra-conservative Gulf kingdom. She told the news agency that she had filed the lawsuit in November. The board allows citizens to object to government decisions judicially by filling lawsuits against state institutions, Bloomberg reported. Al-Sharif's move stems from a “belief that positive change is enforced through legitimate channels and via our national judicial institutions and also in accordance with laws and regulations,” according to the statement. She applied for the license last May. Last September, a Saudi court found Shaima Jastaina guilty of violating the driving ban, and sentenced her to 10 lashes, igniting a firestorm in the conservative Muslim kingdom. She has since been pardoned. “Flogging is a cruel punishment in all circumstances but it beggars belief that the authorities in Saudi Arabia have imposed lashes on a woman apparently for merely driving a car,” said Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa Deputy Director Philip Luther. “Belatedly allowing women to vote in council elections is all well and good, but if they are still going to face being flogged for trying to exercise their right to freedom of movement then the King's much-trumpeted ‘reforms' actually amount to very little,” added Luther. “Saudi Arabia needs to go much further. The whole system of women's subordination to men in Saudi Arabia needs to be dismantled.” The sentence was passed by a court in Jeddah on Tuesday. Two other women are believed to be facing charges for driving, one in Jeddah and one in al-Khobar. The Minister of Interior has formally banned women from driving in Saudi Arabia since 1990, when a group of women staged a driving protest to challenge a customary ban in place until then. Earlier this year an online campaign called on women who hold international driving licences to start driving on Saudi Arabian roads. The “Women2Drive” campaign has used Facebook and Twitter to encourage women to drive as part of their normal daily activities rather than converge in one place. Corporal punishment, particularly flogging, is routinely imposed as a sentence by courts in Saudi Arabia. BM ShortURL: http://goo.gl/aSJTe Tags: Driving, featured, Lawsuit, Sharif Section: Human Rights, Latest News, Saudi Arabia, Women