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- <text id=92TT0159>
- <title>
- Jan. 27, 1992: Kuwait's Cleanup
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Jan. 27, 1992 Is Bill Clinton For Real?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 26
- KUWAIT
- Kuwait's Cleanup
- </hdr><body>
- <p>One year later, the country has been almost completely rebuilt,
- but the psychological scars will take much longer to heal
- </p>
- <p>By Dean Fischer/Kuwait City
- </p>
- <p> Gleaming new Chryslers and Mitsubishis fill the remodeled
- showroom of Bader al-Mulla and Bros. But upstairs the executive
- offices are still a charred shambles, torched by fleeing Iraqi
- troops 11 months ago. Anwar al-Mulla, on holiday in Europe when
- Iraq invaded Kuwait, returned at war's end to join his brothers
- in the monumental rebuilding task. Iraqis had seized 3,500
- al-Mulla automobiles; the company's losses from fire and theft
- totaled $230 million. Al-Mulla's house, which served as the
- headquarters of Saddam Hussein's occupation overseer, was also
- devastated. His sole consolation: "They left the silverware and
- took the stainless steel."
- </p>
- <p> These days, the al-Mullas' future looks bright: the demand
- for new automobiles is outstripping the supply, and that is
- perhaps the most visible sign that the consumer society of the
- Persian Gulf city-state has been restored to prosperity. The
- pace of reconstruction has been stunningly rapid. Essential
- services have been resumed; most government buildings have been
- repaired; ports have reopened. The debris-and-body-choked
- "Highway of Death" leading north toward Iraq has been cleared
- and opened to civilian traffic. Supermarket shelves are
- restocked with imported gourmet delicacies, and shops sell the
- latest fashions.
- </p>
- <p> Kuwait's five-star hotels were targeted for destruction by
- Iraq's defeated army; now most are back in business. The eighth
- floor of the 406-room International Hotel was set aflame, but
- employees prevented the fire from engulfing the building.
- Hermann Simon, the Austrian general manager of the
- International, hands out Iraqi cartridge shells as souvenirs.
- "Only an Iraqi burns a hotel from the top," he says. "That's why
- we are still in business."
- </p>
- <p> Schools and hospitals are functioning, although teachers
- and nurses are in short supply. The Iraqis stripped hospitals
- of medical equipment, but most of it has been replaced. Kuwaiti
- allegations that Iraqi soldiers killed premature babies by
- throwing them out of incubators may have been exaggerated, but
- doctors insist that an incubator shortage did cause the death
- of some newborns.
- </p>
- <p> The last of the 647 oil-well fires ignited by the Iraqis
- was extinguished in November, months ahead of schedule. Kuwait
- is producing 500,000 bbl. of oil a day, well on the way to
- matching its prewar quota of 1.5 million bbl. Vast lakes of
- spilled petroleum remain to be drained from the desert sands,
- but the Kuwait Oil Co. is already pumping 35,000 bbl. daily from
- those lakes. The blackened skies over the city have cleared, and
- the air is cleansed of acrid smoke.
- </p>
- <p> Kuwait paid the final installment of its $16.5 billion
- Desert Storm debt to the U.S. in December, relying partly on the
- country's Fund for Future Generations. Nevertheless, the Emir
- Sheik Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah ordered the government to write
- off $5 billion in consumer debts and assume responsibility for
- an additional $25 billion owed by commercial banks. Despite
- these obligations, a $5 billion reconstruction loan sought last
- fall was oversubscribed by a consortium of international banks.
- </p>
- <p> If rebuilding is well advanced, the country's psychic
- rehabilitation has barely begun. The seven-month occupation left
- deep scars that will take years to heal. Iraqi soldiers tortured
- or brutalized an estimated 15,000 Kuwaitis, including more than
- 1,000 female victims of rape, who are considered unmarriageable
- or pariahs by a conservative Islamic society. According to a
- government-authorized medical study, 350 Kuwaitis died during
- their imprisonment, usually after gruesome torture. Limbs were
- broken, eyes gouged out, ears and genitals cut off. In one case,
- a man was half immersed in a vat of acid. Men were killed by
- bullets, women by hanging, and victims of both sexes were
- executed by ax.
- </p>
- <p> Thousands of Kuwaiti children suffered severe stress. A
- United Nations Children's Fund survey of those ages 5 to 13 in
- one neighborhood found that 62% showed signs of traumatic
- shock. Teenagers were disoriented by the violence. Since the
- war, knife fights have erupted in schools, drug use is mounting,
- burglaries and vandalism have increased. Near a fashionable
- seaside shopping mall, teenage boys on motorcycles harass girls,
- and others race in flashy sports cars. Some of these youths were
- among the 400,000 Kuwaitis who left the country during the
- occupation and lived a life of ease in European and Arab
- capitals. Their re-entry into a restrictive society has
- disrupted the social fabric.
- </p>
- <p> Kuwaitis who stayed put developed a measure of
- self-reliance that enabled them to survive the ordeal of
- occupation. "We became inventive, we learned new skills, we took
- out garbage," says one woman. Not surprisingly, the
- stay-at-homes resent those who fled. "When we saw Kuwaitis
- coming back with their Cartier watches and their FREE KUWAIT T
- shirts," added the woman, "we got angry." The clash of cultures
- has gradually diminished, but ill feelings linger.
- </p>
- <p> The vigilante justice meted out by Kuwaiti resistance
- fighters against Palestinians suspected of collaboration with
- the enemy ended after a few weeks, leaving an estimated 100
- Palestinians dead. But of the 300,000 Palestinian workers in the
- country before the Iraqi invasion, only about 30,000 remain.
- Most fled the government-encouraged atmosphere of fear and
- intimidation.
- </p>
- <p> Sheik Jaber is not only determined to punish his enemies;
- he is also reluctant to trust his friends. Egypt and Syria
- offered to lend ground troops as a deterrent against the threat
- of future Iraqi aggression in exchange for billions of dollars
- in economic aid. But Kuwait wants no Arab soldiers stationed on
- its soil. Instead, the Kuwaitis are almost totally reliant on
- the U.S. for protection. They had hoped American troops would
- stay, but have contented themselves with a 10-year security
- agreement allowing the U.S. to maintain weapons and conduct
- military exercises in Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> This dependence on the U.S. has made Sheik Jaber more
- responsive to quiet American diplomacy pushing for democracy.
- Even opponents of the regime believe the Emir is sincere in
- proposing an election for a new parliament next October, though
- the most vocal advocates still cannot agree on whether to open
- the voting franchise, now limited to 65,000 Kuwaiti men, to
- women and others.
- </p>
- <p> But few believe the Emir's cautious reforms are enough to
- ensure Kuwait's future stability. The country's leaders are
- listening to good advice, says former Plan ning Minister
- Sulaiman Mutawa, but it is imperative that they take the
- initiative in directing youthful energies into national
- development projects. The postwar period has given Kuwaitis an
- opportunity to be admired for political enlightenment as well
- as envied for their immense wealth. The country has done well
- at restoring its luxurious way of life, but internal tensions
- and external threats could yet impede full recovery.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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