Director’s Comment:
In less than a month, the disenfranchised population of Saudi Arabia went from high hopes for
political and social opening to a state of uncertainty and confusion, or as one person described it,
a collective state of depression. This is due to King Abdullah’s recent contradictory
actions. Director’s Comment:
It is hard to understand why Arab regimes continue to meet or talk about Arab unity when they and
their voiceless population know in advance that the result of their meetings is always the same:
insulting each other and blaming the US, colonial powers, and especially Israel for all Arab
failures at home. Director’s Comment:
The following article explains how unstable the Saudi rulers are. This is partially the reason the
notorious Saudi Interior Minister Prince Naif was appointed deputy to the King. Prince Naif is known
for his anti-minority, anti-Women, anti-reformers and anti-non-Muslim contemptuous and ruthless
polices. Director’s Comment:
A group of Saudi progressive men, Ansar Al-Mar’ah (Supporters of Women), has been seeking the
government’s approval to establish an organization to support full rights for Saudi women; but the
group decided to call it quits after Naif was appointed deputy to the King. Even though the reason
given for the group’s decision to pull the plug is bureaucratic fatigue, some of them admit
privately that trying to establish anything that might imply independent civil society in Saudi
Arabia is dangerous, and under Naif it would be suicidal.
Read
More Director’s Comment:
King Abdullah was quoted as saying that appointing Naif as his deputy is in the best interest of the
country. Some Saudi analysts took this to mean Saudi Arabia is facing some threats from its
oppressed religious minorities, women and possibly expatriates. Director’s Comment:
The newly appointed deputy to the King, Prince Naif, met with senior military officers as his first
order of business. This means he is more likely than not to become Crown Prince and defense
minister. Some Saudis believe that Abdullah’s motivation to appoint Naif as his deputy was to remove
Naif from the ministry of interior, which he had managed for many decades, and hand it to a less
controversial royal or even commoner. Naif's first comments since his appointment sound like he is
going to follow the same polices he has thus far: Islam will be the overriding tool of ruling, which
means continuing his support for religious extremists as the state's best defense.
Read
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In mid-February, King Abdullah took advantage of his powerful brothers’ weakened grip on power due
to their squabbling over inheritance of the gravely-ill Crown Prince Sultan’s positions. Crown
Prince and Defense Minister Sultan, Abdullah’s arch contender, was diagnosed with advanced
pancreatic cancer in Nov. 2008 in New York and was told there was very little that could be done to
prolong his life. King Abdullah’s two other equally-powerful half brothers, Interior Minister Naif
and Selman (Governor of the capital), have been spending most of their time with their full brother
Sultan, first in New York, then in Morocco and back to New York where Sultan remains today.
King Abdullah has been trying to consolidate power under his wing of the family since 1996. Sultan’s
illness, and the fact that his full brothers travelled with him seeking guidance, favoritism
and blessings, gave the King the opportunity he had been waiting for. He removed some very powerful
religious clerics, appointed his son-in-law as minister of education and a woman to be his deputy
for girls’ schools. Abdullah also rearranged some military, judicial and religious scholars’
positions and included the other four brands of Sunni Islam in religious councils, which had been
dominated by the Hambali (Wahhabi) brand of Islam.
These changes of personnel were welcomed by the Saudi people and seen as positive steps, especially
the removal of the loathed religious extremists who are allied with, and under the control of,
Interior Minister Naif. These changes were to take effect on Feb. 28, but on March 27 King Abdullah
dropped a bombshell on “his people” by decreeing Interior Minister Prince Naif to be a second
deputy, meaning he could be the next King if first deputy Sultan dies or is incapacitated.
Naif is the most hated member of the large Saudi royal family. He is the head of the notorious
religious police, which many Saudis describe as a legal terrorist organization. Naif is also in
charge of the prison system, interrogations, omnipresent informants, police and other security
apparatus. He is known for his public opposition to equal rights for women and religious minorities
and he considers US and European democratic values as antithetical to God’s will and a threat to all
Muslims and their faith.
The Saudi people are dismayed by Abdullah’s appointment of Naif as his deputy, particularly so at a
time of promised change and in light of the fact that Naif and his wing of the family (dubbed the
Sudairi Seven) are perceived to be in opposition to Abdullah and his domestic and foreign policies.
The hopes that surfaced just a short while ago are now dashed by the possibility that the most detested
man in the country might inherit the Saudi throne.
Read
More
Arab Summits: Unity Among Equals
One Arab historian described Arab summits as “unity among equals” by which he meant that none of the
twenty-two Arab regimes are democratically elected, and those that indulge in “elections” win by 99%
because they round up the opposition and throw them in prisons during the run up to the “election.” Arab
summits are single-issue oriented - The Arab-Israeli conflict - and this issue is normally discussed
as the second item on the agenda after personal attacks and accusations.
This summit meeting in Doha, Qatar was no different than the dozens that have preceded it. Right
after the host, the Emir of Qatar, finished his welcoming remarks, Moammar Kaddafi, the ruler of
Libya, grabbed the microphone and addressed King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, “I have been waiting for
six years to tell you that you are the liar. You were made by Britain and protected by the United
States.” This is in response to a comment made by Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, now King, in a summit
meeting in 2003, when he referred to Kaddafi as, "a British-made and an American agent." After
Kaddafi's stinging attack on the Saudi King, who angrily stormed out of the conference room, Kaddafi
continued to describe himself as "the dean of the Arab leaders, the king of kings of Africa and the
leader of the faithful.”
Read More
Time For a Change Before Change Forces Itself
By continuing its oppression and marginalization of its minorities, women and democratic reformers,
the Saudi ruling family will only lead the country to more instability, restlessness and rebellious
activities from all groups. The Saudi ruling family should start thinking and acting differently.
One way to calm people down is to share power with them. This means free elections, regional
autonomy and the building of civil society.
The continued oppression and marginalization of religious minorities, as well as the exclusion of women and democratic reformers, will only lead to more instability and invite exterior groups and states to defend their
religious brethren in Saudi Arabia. Iran, Iraq, Hezbollah and the large Shiite communities in the
Persian Gulf region, Pakistan, Yemen, Afghanistan, Egypt and others will intervene to help the Saudi
religious minorities. This will force the US to intervene militarily to protect the Saudi and
other Gulf autocratic kings, emirs and sheiks so they can maintain the flow of oil without which
world economies would collapse.
This is what the West has done for at least one hundred years and look at what has been achieved -
instability, insecurity, extremism and terrorism. The US, especially, should reach out to democratic
reformers in and outside of the ruling family and promote civil society because the present
political arrangement is incapable of accommodating the needs, demands and expectations of the
increasingly restless and modernizing population.
Read
More
First Victim of Naif’s Appointment
National Instability led to Naif's Appointment
Some religious minorities have demonstrated against abuses by Saudi religious police recently. The
government’s harsh reaction, spearheaded by Naif's Ministry of Interior, led a Shiite cleric in
Eastern Arabia to threaten Shiite secession from the kingdom unless they are treated with dignity
and as equal citizens.
The Saudi religious minorities have suffered severe discrimination under Saudi-Wahhabi rule since
the inception of the state in 1932. The Shiite regions are the least developed areas in the county
even though the national wealth, oil, is located in Eastern Saudi Arabia where the majority of the
Saudi Shiites have resided long before the existence of the Saudi-Wahhabi state.
Read More- Arabic
De Facto Crown Prince
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