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- <text id=91TT1302>
- <title>
- June 17, 1991: Saudi Arabia:Skirmishes Under the Veil
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 17, 1991 The Gift Of Life
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 39
- SAUDI ARABIA
- Skirmishes Under the Veil
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Though life has returned to normal in the kingdom, the religious
- conservatives and the moderates are stepping up their battle
- over the country's direction
- </p>
- <p>By DEAN FISCHER/RIYADH
- </p>
- <p> The camouflage-clad American troops with automatic rifles
- slung over their shoulders have all but disappeared from the
- streets of Riyadh. In the cool evening hours, Saudi families
- once again browse in the stores, examining electronic gadgets
- and comparing the latest imported luxury cars. In Jidda, gateway
- to the Muslim shrines of Mecca and Medina, preparations are well
- under way to accommodate the 2 million pilgrims expected during
- this month's hajj. Says an adviser to a senior Saudi minister:
- "We feel a cloud has been lifted from over our land."
- </p>
- <p> Three months after the gulf war ended, Saudi Arabia seems
- to have returned to its placid ways. But the calm atmosphere is a
- mirage. Operation Desert Storm may be over, but it has
- unleashed powerful political and social crosswinds in the
- kingdom. Buffeted by the currents, King Fahd is struggling to
- preserve a precarious balance between secular moderates and
- religious conservatives while opening up the family-run
- government to his subjects. At stake is not only the direction
- of Saudi society, but also the survival of a royal dynasty that
- has ruled the country since its founding 60 years ago.
- </p>
- <p> Saudi officials even claim that the country is slightly
- strapped for cash. The government has been forced to borrow $7
- billion to fulfill commitments to the U.S.-led alliance. Despite
- a wartime surge in oil production from 5.5 million to 8 million
- bbl. a day, Western economists estimate a budget deficit of $25
- billion this year. Skittish about both the expense and foreign
- entanglements, Fahd has reneged on an agreement to base a
- Pan-Arab defense force composed primarily of Egyptian and Syrian
- troops on Saudi soil. The plan envisaged an exchange of Egyptian
- and Syrian military manpower for economic and financial aid.
- </p>
- <p> The country's postwar foreign policy has been a mix of
- shortsightedness and self-interest. Like the Bush
- Administration, Fahd had hoped Saddam Hussein would be a
- casualty of the gulf war; the King now fears that a
- Shi`ite-dominated Iraq possibly aligned with Iran is worse than
- coexisting with a weakened Saddam. Washington's hopes of Saudi
- leadership in the intensified search for Arab-Israeli peace were
- dashed when Riyadh refused direct participation in negotiations
- with Israel. Only under intense U.S. pressure did the Saudis
- consent to discuss such peripheral issues with Israel as arms
- control and water rights if a peace conference is convened. Fahd
- has not forgiven Jordan's King Hussein and Palestine Liberation
- Organization chairman Yasser Arafat for their support of
- Saddam, further complicating U.S. efforts to forge a united
- position among Arab moderates.
- </p>
- <p> Eager to show Washington that he is willing to embrace at
- least some democratic principles, Fahd announced plans in April
- to appoint a Consultative Council to advise the policymaking
- Council of Ministers. By Western democratic standards, the
- proposal is modest. But in the autocratic gulf region, any step
- to broaden participation in government is radical. Fahd first
- proposed a Consultative Council more than a decade ago, but
- shelved the initiative when the Iranian revolution aroused fears
- of regional instability.
- </p>
- <p> In characteristically subdued Saudi style, the debate
- prompted by Fahd's proposed reforms is neither conducted in
- public meetings nor reported in the country's media. The
- government bans public gatherings of three or more people, and
- press censorship precludes coverage of internal disputes.
- Instead, petitions and pamphlets, widely disseminated by
- photocopiers and fax machines, inform the public of conservative
- and liberal views. Both minorities seek to influence Saudi
- Arabia's silent majority, but the literature of the
- well-organized ultraconservatives is more plentiful and
- vituperative. Religious extremists have even advocated the
- execution of so-called secularists--men without beards. So
- vicious are the accusations that the country's most influential
- Islamic scholars last week condemned the ultraconservative
- campaign as "counter to the interests of the Muslim society."
- Like the moderates, the conservatives have endorsed the concept
- of a Consultative Council and called for an end to corruption.
- But they also want Shari`a (Islamic law) applied to banks,
- courts and the media. The government, for example, would be
- barred from borrowing money from banks, and noncriminal offenses
- would be tried in religious courts. So far, King Fahd has
- rejected the demand.
- </p>
- <p> During Ramadan, the month-long Islamic fasting period that
- followed the war, vigilante members of the religious police, the
- mutawain, stepped up their harassment of Saudi and foreign women
- who displayed too much skin in violation of dress codes. Women
- appearing in public without veils, or without wearing
- head-to-toe abayas, have been abused and occasionally assaulted
- by the cane-wielding morals squads.
- </p>
- <p> The vigilantes, mostly semi-educated young men bitterly
- opposed to Western values, have broken into compounds in Riyadh
- and Jidda to threaten and arrest Westerners drinking
- home-brewed liquor in defiance of the ban on alcohol. A women's
- tennis tournament in Riyadh was halted when the mutawain learned
- of it. The government advised an oil-company executive to cancel
- a party because members of both sexes were invited. Wives of
- Western businessmen and diplomats are fearful of leaving their
- villas in the evening unless accompanied by their husbands. To
- do otherwise in the atmosphere of intimidation created by the
- mutawain is to risk imprisonment.
- </p>
- <p> To curb the excesses of the fanatics, the King appointed
- a religious moderate, Abdul Rahman al-Said, to head the
- mutawain, officially known as the Committee for the Promotion
- of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice. Al-Said, a former dean of
- Islamic studies at Imam Mohammed Ibn Saud Islamic University,
- received an $18 million budget increase and instructions to rid
- the mutawain of zealous volunteers. But harassment of Saudis and
- foreigners by the mutawain continues, underscoring how difficult
- it will be for al-Said to gain control of the organization and
- its durable network of faculty and student supporters.
- </p>
- <p> Alarmed by the aggressiveness of the religious extremists,
- 43 moderate businessmen and intellectuals petitioned Fahd to
- fulfill his pledge to make the government more democratic. "A
- Consultative Council is a symbol of participation that will help
- educate the public," says Abdul Muhsin al-Akkas, an executive
- of the Riyadh Chamber of Commerce and Industry. "We are not yet
- ready for free elections, but it is a step forward." In
- response, the religious conservatives marshaled support in the
- mosques for the implementation of Shari`a. Last month religious
- leaders in the conservative stronghold of Buraida spread rumors
- that a popular sheik, Salman al-Oda, had been arrested. Five
- thousand followers marched on the governor's palace in protest.
- </p>
- <p> The moderates were encouraged when Fahd met in April with
- four of the 47 women who drove their automobiles last November
- in defiance of tradition. The women, many of them teachers (one
- of the few professions open to females), were suspended from
- their jobs, plagued by anonymous phone calls, threatened with
- beheading by rabid Muslim preachers and denied permission to
- leave the country. Like a stern but forgiving father, Fahd told
- the women he had to discipline them as he would his own
- daughters, but hinted that their punishment would soon end.
- Nonetheless, the issue of women's rights is likely to be
- deferred until the Consultative Council issue is settled.
- </p>
- <p> To educated middle-class Saudis, who chafe at religious
- persecution and political disenfranchisement, Fahd's promises
- have raised hopes of progressive if gradual change. "By next
- fall," predicts an aide to a senior prince, "there will be a
- Consultative Council and a major Cabinet reshuffle." The
- council, consisting of 80 to 100 appointive members, will have
- limited powers that will not impinge on the absolute authority
- of the monarch. According to the Saudi adviser, the Cabinet
- changes will not involve defense and internal security. Fahd's
- half brother, Crown Prince Abdullah, commands the National
- Guard, and his full brothers, Prince Sultan and Prince Naif,
- direct the Defense and Interior ministries.
- </p>
- <p> Authority would remain firmly in the hands of the King and
- his brothers. But in the Saudi tradition, the slightest
- movement toward liberalization is noteworthy. It was not until
- the 1960s that slavery was abolished and women were allowed to
- attend schools. A Consultative Council is a concession to the
- concept of political dialogue, if not to the principle of power
- sharing. Fahd, who governs by family consensus, should not shy
- away from a modest extension of the political franchise,
- particularly if it represents no dilution of his own power. He
- might even find it easier to control the religious extremists
- who pose such a threat, in the moderates' view, to the stability
- of the kingdom. Despite their endorsement of a Consultative
- Council, says a Western diplomat, "the religious conservatives
- correctly perceive that one of its aims is to provide a forum
- for people to speak out against their excesses."
- </p>
- <p> Moderates fret that Fahd will once again back down rather
- than confront the conservatives. "He will never fight them,"
- says a Saudi intellectual. But failure to institute reforms now
- will only serve to encourage the extremists. Fahd's father,
- King Abdul Aziz, founder of the kingdom, did not hesitate to
- sever his alliance with the puritanical Wahhabi warriors when
- they defied his rule. As the struggle over Saudi Arabia's
- future intensifies, Fahd could do worse than recall his father's
- choice when challenged by his kingdom's zealots.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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