House of Saud re-embraces
totalitarianism
By John R Bradley : atimes.com
Residents of the tiny provincial capital of Saudi Arabia's northernmost
province last week witnessed a grisly scene in the main public square:
the corpses of three militants tied to poles, on top of which were
placed their severed heads. The three - who returned to the kingdom
after fighting in Afghanistan - were beheaded in Sakaka, the capital of
al-Jouf province, after being convicted of murdering the region's deputy
governor, a top religious court judge and a police chief. They also
killed a Saudi soldier, and kidnapped a foreign national.
That small-scale rebellion in al-Jouf, along with a prison riot and a
rare public demonstration in support of the Palestinians, occurred in a
region that is a power base of the al-Sudairy branch of the al-Saud
ruling family. The branch, known as the "Sudairy Seven", includes King
Fahd and his six full brothers, who hold most of the key government
posts. Saudi officials admitted in January last year that the
rebellion's three leaders had attracted the support of dozens of locals.
At one stage, perhaps fearing an explosion of violence or even a popular
uprising, some 8,000 soldiers from the National Guard were deployed in
the nearby city of Tabuk.
At its height in 2003, the unrest had seemed to represent in microcosm
the kingdom-wide tensions that threatened to spill over into a general
uprising. The rebellion's end, then, with the crudely symbolic public
display of its leaders' heads on poles, could now likewise be seen as
marking the al-Saud's triumph over the most extreme of its homegrown
enemies - at least for now.
The al-Saud regime appears to have got the upper-hand in its battle with
radical Islamists. Al-Qaeda's suspected chief in Saudi Arabia, Saleh al-Aoofi,
was reportedly among at least 16 militants killed last week in three
days of fierce gun battles with security forces in the north of the
kingdom. Another two of the 26 most-wanted terrorists were confirmed
killed in that and another clash in the capital Riyadh, leaving only
three from the list still at large.
Through its actions against militants and close, behind-the-scenes
cooperation with US, British and French intelligence services, the
regime has convinced all but the most entrenched anti-Saudi voices in
Washington that it is a crucial and reliable ally in the global "war on
terrorism". Crown Prince Abdullah, the de facto leader, is expected to
meet with US President George W Bush at his Crawford, Texas, ranch later
this month, signaling the importance Bush continues to place on US-Saudi
relations (notwithstanding the pre-election excitement over the issue).
Partial elections for municipality councils, dismissed by the vast
majority of Saudis as a waste of time and in which even many senior
princes did not bother to set an example by voting, have meanwhile given
other pro-al-Saud voices in the West - who often have links to
Saudi-funded think-tanks and/or the arms and oil industries - an
additional reason to champion the regime as a force for modernization
and democratization.
In reality, the opposite is true. The regime is not giving up power or
changing its historically repressive domestic policies in the face of
opposition, but - more predictably - closing ranks and reasserting its
totalitarian rule. Emboldened by its success in the domestic "war on
terror", which got under way only after their rule was directly
threatened, the al-Saud is flexing its other muscles so that the masses,
too, are left in no doubt that it is back in total control. As with
other Arab regimes, it is using the "war on terror" to silence all
dissent, but in ways that have peculiar Saudi characteristics.
A few days after the al-Jouf executions, for instance, six Somali
nationals were beheaded together in Jeddah for the crime of armed
robbery. The six killed no one, meaning the punishment was grossly
unfair, even by the standards of Saudi Arabia's strict code of Islamic
Sharia law. The Somalis had served their initial five-year sentence, and
had also been flogged; they were not even aware before being led to the
chopping block that they had suddenly been sentenced to death, according
to human rights groups. Hailing from an impoverished, war-ravaged
country whose government can be guaranteed to ignore the sorry plight
not only of its citizens abroad but even those at home, the Somalis were
easy prey for a regime eager to do whatever it can to instill fear in
the restless Saudi population.
In the two years following the September 11, 2001 attacks, when
reformist voices were in the ascendancy and pressure from Washington
meant the al-Saud had to at least pretend to behave like civilized
rulers, it was reported in domestic newspapers that there was an
increasing recognition that the death penalty was not working as a
deterrent. But at least 40 people have been publicly beheaded this year
alone, more than during the whole of last year. And while there had been
a wider debate in the Saudi media about the social causes of crime, now
scare stories blaming "African immigrants" abound in a
government-sponsored campaign aimed at diverting attention away from the
real causes: corruption, massive unemployment and a lack of respect for
authority.
The treatment of Saudi gay men, too, seemed to be improving when
international uproar followed an Interior Ministry statement in January
2002 that three men in the southern city of Abha had been "beheaded for
homosexuality". The report provoked widespread condemnation from gay and
human-rights groups in the West - and a swift denial from an official at
the Saudi Embassy in Washington, DC. Tariq Allegany, an embassy
spokesman, said the three were beheaded for the sexual abuse of boys,
adding: "I would guess there's sodomy going on daily in Saudi Arabia,
but we don't have executions for it all the time."
The kingdom's Internet Services Unit, responsible for blocking sites
deemed "unIslamic" or politically sensitive, even unblocked access to a
home page for gay Saudi surfers after being bombarded with critical
emails from the US. A S Getenio, manager of GayMiddleEast.com, said at
the time Saudi Arabia seemed concerned about the bad publicity blocking
the site would bring, "at the time it was involved in a multi-million
dollar advertising campaign in the US to improve its image".
Now the al-Saud have no such inhibitions. The website is once again
blocked, and the Saudi religious police - acting on "tip offs" - are
raiding gay gatherings in Jeddah on an almost monthly basis. More than
100 young men caught dancing and "behaving like women" at a private
party were sentenced this month to a total of 14,200 lashes, after a
trial behind closed doors and without defense lawyers. The men were also
given jail sentences of up to two years. This witch-hunt, like the one
targeting "African immigrants", also serves to deflect public attention
from the royal family's indulgence and mismanagement. But it
additionally makes the al-Saud seem more Islamist than the Islamists, as
they try to steal the radicals' clothes to shore up support among the
masses.
The paradox, then, is that instability in the kingdom over the past two
years, interpreted in the West as possibly threatening the regime's very
existence, in the end helped it not only survive but consolidate its
iron grip on power. It was one factor, for instance, that sent the price
of a barrel of oil skyrocketing to all-time highs.
At the same time, the violence hindered, rather than helped, those who
were pushing for peaceful democratic changes. No one knows that better
than Saudi Arabia's three leading reformists and their lawyer, who are
languishing in jail in Riyadh after calling for the establishment of a
constitutional monarchy and an independent judiciary. Peaceful public
demonstrations have been ruthlessly crushed, with some of the
participants sentenced to lashings and jail.
Their organizer, Saad al-Faqih, who heads the London-based opposition
group The Movement for Islamic Reform in Arabia, was bizarrely linked by
the US to an alleged plot by a Saudi to kill Libyan leader Muammar
Gaddafi, the details conveniently "leaked" to the New York Times. Then,
with backing from the United Kingdom government, the US got him listed
by the United Nations as an al-Qaeda supporter and funder. This whole
travesty was hastily concocted, say other Saudi dissidents, at the
behest of the al-Saud, who were beginning to realize with alarm that al-Faqih's
calls for change could potentially lead a peaceful revolution.
The kingdom now has an estimated US$60 billion budget surplus, and has
announced massive new infrastructure projects. Flush with cash, the
regime again seems to be resorting to the tried and tested, following
the strategy of spending ostentatiously to keep the people happy or
satisfied, or at least not dissatisfied, just as had been the case in
the oil boom years of the 1970s. Once again, it wants to be seen as the
goose laying the golden egg. But it is fool's gold.
The regime has always sought to buy the loyalty of the Saudi people by
providing a cradle-to-grave welfare system, and crush all those who
refused to play the game. But by once again dealing with the symptoms
and not the causes, the regime is merely tightening the lid on a
pressure cooker in an attempt to delay the inevitable. And what worked
in the 1970s, with a population of less than 10 million, will not work
with a population of 24 million.
The hoped-for stability is therefore delusional in a country where
underlying social and economic problems are not being addressed, and to
where thousands of Saudi jihadis will return in due course from
neighboring Iraq. Indeed, unconfirmed reports on Islamist websites say
dozens of Saudi jihadis have returned to the kingdom from Iraq in recent
months specifically to plan a fresh wave of attacks against the oil
industry, following an unprecedented call by Saudi dissident Osama bin
Laden last December for just such attacks.
All the talk now on Islamist websites is about the remarkably vulnerable
Saudi oil pipeline network. It is not a matter of if, but when, those
attacks start to take place, in a second wave of violence that will once
again punish the al-Saud regime for burying its head in the oil-rich
sand.