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- THE GULF WAR, Page 30On the Disco Front
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- It is a quarter to one in the morning, and Medo, a
- 16-year-old Kuwaiti, is chatting with his friend and compatriot
- Khaled, 22, as they prop up a wall at Sultana's, the
- third-floor disco at Cairo's Semiramis Inter-Continental.
- "Cairo is boring," grumbles Medo. Khaled murmurs in agreement
- as he eyes the action on the floor. "I come here every night,"
- Medo says. "There's nothing else to do."
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- Nothing to do! Their country has been snatched by a thief;
- Americans, Egyptians, Britons and Saudis, among others, are
- braving the gulf deserts and Saddam's rockets to win it back
- for them, and these two able-bodied young men say there is
- nothing to do. For those who do not think Kuwait is worth the
- fight, the habits of Medo and Khaled are all the anecdotal
- evidence needed to prove the Kuwaitis are a spoiled and
- arrogant bunch.
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- But Kuwait's elders do understand the problem. One exile
- group in Cairo has sent flyers to the 7,000 Kuwaiti families
- in the city, asking them to behave modestly and stop gathering
- conspicuously in public. Sober-minded Kuwaitis insist that
- their boogie-loving brethren, featured prominently in the
- Western media, make up only a tiny minority of their
- countrymen. "A lot of the criticism is bitter and not deserved
- just because there are a few crazy people," says Adeeb Essa,
- spokesman for the Association for Free Kuwait in London.
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- In fact, while Kuwaitis were the most notorious among the
- gulf nationalities for flaunting their wealth and easy
- life-style, the Aug. 2 invasion was a cold shower for most of
- them. Though a few youths still dance the nights away, many of
- their peers are at the front. An estimated 23,000 Kuwaitis are
- believed to be under arms in Saudi Arabia. Only 7,000 are
- military personnel who escaped from Kuwait; the rest are
- volunteers. When an exile group in Cairo organized a training
- program for nurse's aides, 500 Kuwaitis applied for the 120
- slots. Other displaced Kuwaitis are preparing for new lives in
- a liberated Kuwait by taking courses in such things as
- automobile repair, plumbing, electrical wiring and, for women,
- housekeeping. In the past, foreign laborers did such work, but
- the new Kuwait is expected to be much more self-sufficient.
- Perhaps Medo and Khaled figure they'd better party while they
- can.
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