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LAHORE, Pakistan: Pakistani student Laiba Rashid, 22, hopes her life will change once she learns how to drive a motorcycle after undergoing a training programme that teaches women how to operate two-wheelers in the bustling eastern city of Lahore. Although the programme is 7 years old, it’s rare to see women driving motorcycles. Women driving cars or riding pillion on two-wheelers driven by a male relative is more socially acceptable in the conservative, Islamic nation.

“I hope this will change my life because I am dependent on my brother to pick me up and drop me to college,” Rashid told Reuters on her first day at the Women on Wheels (WOW) driving programme offered free by the Lahore traffic police. Ishrat Khan practices riding a motorbike as others watch her, during a training session as part of the “Women on Wheels” program organised by the traffic police department in Lahore, Pakistan, October 1, 2024. Photo: Reuters She said she wants to buy a motorcycle to go to college, adding that, previously, there were no women drivers in her family.



“Now everybody is convinced that women should be independent in their movement to schools, jobs and markets,” she said. Women driving two-wheelers has been a cultural and religious taboo, said Bushra Iqbal Hussain, a social activist and director of Safe Childhood, an organisation advocating the safety of female children. But more women are now changing the culture, she said, like they did in the 1980s with regular cars, i.

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