A music video mocking Saudi Arabia’s ban on female driving has gone viral. The “No Woman, No Drive” video, a tongue-in-cheek rendition of Bob Marley’s classic “No Woman, No Cry,” offers a satirical view on one of the country’s current issues.

In less than 24 hours after the over four minute-video was uploaded on YouTube on Saturday, the same day a few women defied the female driving ban in the country, it has already amassed over a million views, with people praising the humorous lyrics of the song.

The video sees the creator, stand-up comedian Hisham Fageeh, singing a capella with Saudi YouTube sensation Fahad Albutairi and Riyadh-born Iranian musician Alaa Wardi about women not being allowed to drive in the country.

He touched on the dumbfounding remark by a Saudi cleric who said women who drive hurt their ovaries and pass on “clinical disorder” to their children.

Mr Fageeh sings, “Say I remember when you used to sit in the family car but backseat.”

The lyrics of the song also include, “Ovaries are safe and well so you can make lots and lots of babies” and “In this bright future, you can forget your past so put your car key away.”

“Your feet is your only carriage but only inside the house and when I say it I mean it,” the song continues.

Mr Fageeh said that their song, which he first heard from “this Jamaican guy” while studying in the U.S., wasn’t motivated by politics, but by comedy.

“Our job is to make people laugh,” he told Al Arabiya News. “We are not political analysts or anthing.

“We don’t really care to have agenda we want to be neutral and entertain people.”

The ban on female driving isn’t a law, but that didn’t stop authorities from arresting women who defied the ban.

On October 26, the campaign “October 26 driving” urged women with international driving licenses to get behind the wheel as a sign of protest. It was reported that there were about 60 women who drove on Saturday to support the cause.

Those who were arrested for driving were fined 300 riyals each and were told to sign a “pledge to respect the kingdom’s law,” Colonel Fawaz al-Miman told the AFP.