The figures you point out do highlight some of the positive steps in the social and education spheres, particularly in recent years. I believe someone raised earlier the point of the driving ban on women, which women have been fighting for years.
These steps are welcome, but I would argue they are more of a deflection from providing more political rights for women and do not address more fundamental rights, such as the male guardianship system, which remains very intact.
So, yes, I would say these sorts of buzzwords are not very sincere in realizing the full rights of women. The arrests of the women's rights activists and the cases of women fleeing the country are not exceptions to the rule, or mistakes borne out of a slightly reckless reason, but are really systematic events that really get to the heart of the political will of the regime to respect women's rights and women human rights defenders in particular.