Saudi Women Have Had It
CDHR’s Commentary: Saudi women are gradually and irreversibly taking charge of their lives and livelihood. Having been denied their citizenship rights as equal members of Saudi society since long before the establishment of the Saudi state in 1932, Saudi women are saying "no" to institutionalized and severely enforced marginalization, oppression and neglect. They are the most vocal advocates for justice, equality, tolerance and inclusion. From demanding release of their loved ones from Saudi dungeons, to campaigning to hire women to sell lingerie in department stores, to removing of business wakil, to voting in cosmetic municipal elections and to the beating and (in some cases killing) of abusive husbands, Saudi women are revolting against an autocratic and theocratic chauvinist system and male domination.
One of the most brilliant and courageous actions taken by a large number of women to make their legitimate grievances heard took place on March 7, 2012, in Abha, the capital of the picturesque Asir region. In what seemed to be a well-planned and organized show of defiance, “the students of Abha girls’ college” carried out a major demonstration against disrespect by their teacher and dilapidated and unhealthy conditions of their college.” As usual a massing of the government’s security agencies, including the detested religious police descended on the college campus and tried to quell the “uprising” to no avail, at least for a while. “Fifty three (53) students were injured and transported to different hospitals in the region”, according to Saudi media reports.
Events
like this Saudi women students’ demonstration would be a normal practice
in most countries, but in
The
Abha girls’ school is not the only women’s educational institution
that lacks modern equipment, and a safe and healthy environment. Most
Saudi girl’s schools are located in rented, neglected and unsafe
structures. One would think the Saudi authorities would spend the
people’s money on modern schools, hospitals, water treatment and better
healthcare systems for all. Instead, the Saudi rulers and business people are
investing in building infrastructure such as the proposed rail system to
connect the Saudi state with Jordan and the rest of the autocratic Gulf
monarchies as well as the proposed bridge to connect
The current Saudi government’s actions and policies in general, as well as Saudi males’ choking domination over women will only expedite what the regime is imprudently trying to avoid, a people uprising against their common oppressor as others in the region have done.
The
Saudi Doctrine: A Lethal Threat to Freedom of Expression
Championed
by the Saudi regime, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation’s UN
Resolution 16/18 calls for any criticism of Islam to be criminalized
internationally; harmless tweets are now grounds for torture and possible
execution as evidenced by the arrest and deportation of Mr. Hamza Kashgari from
CDHR’s
Commentary: The minute a harmless
expression concerning the Prophet Mohammed was tweeted by a Saudi columnist and
blogger, 23-year-old Hamza Kashgari (Hamza), thousands of angry responses
called for his blood for the "crime" of "blasphemy and apostasy"
which are punishable by death in Muslim Countries. Hamza's misfortune started
when he tweeted a few messages explaining
an imaginary conversation he had with Prophet Mohammed in
which he told the Prophet, "On your birthday, I will say that I have loved
the rebel in you, that you've always been a source of inspiration to me, and
that I do not like the halos of divinity around you. I shall not pray for
you."
In
non-Muslim countries, this would be considered personal opinion at best, or who
cares, he is entitled to his personal opinion. Not in Muslim countries,
especially in
Within a
few hours after Hamza’s tweets hit the social media, more than 30
thousand angry responses flooded internet chat rooms, websites and videos. Some
Saudi clerics called for Hamza's execution and put bounty money on his head.
Ironically, the very same clerics who demanded Hamza’s torture and
execution for offending the Prophet Mohammed consider celebrating the
Prophet’s birthday a sacrilege. They want people to celebrate and
glorify the Prophet all the time, not only once a year. In addition, any
celebration of occasions other than the two major Muslim Eids (Al-Fiter and
Eldha, marking the end of Ramadan fasting and completion of the
Hajj’s annual rituals) are considered Bid’ah, a novelty, or
infidel’s tradition.
Realizing
that his life was threatened, Hamza took the first flight out of
What
Hamza did not know was that the Saudi authorities had called their counterparts
in the Malaysian regime in Kuala Lumpur and instructed them to arrest and
return Hamza to Saudi Arabia, where he will most likely be tortured, executed,
or deposited for decades in a Saudi dungeon—much like Hadi Al-Mutaif of
Najran, who at the age of 18 was sentenced to death for saying “pray on
--" (one of the Prophet’s private parts). He was spared the death
sentence because of global pressure, but incarcerated for 18 years, from 1994
to 2012.
It’s
not a surprise that the Saudi clerics reacted with vengeance, that’s what
they are paid to do. However, one would think by now that the Saudi people
would have taken advantage of Hamza’s controversial tweets and engaged in
constructive discussions about taboos imposed on them by their autocratic and
theocratic rulers, who use religion to divide, oppress, segregate, control and
exploit them.
What
concerns us at the Washington-based Center for Democracy and Human Rights in
Saudi Arabia (CDHR) is not what Hamza said, but his right to express his
personal views freely. However, freedom of unfavorable religious
expressions under the Saudi ruling family’s system is considered an
insult to the state and its rulers. According to a royal decree issued by King Abdullah in April 2011, criticism of the royals
and their clerical front men is forbidden -- which puts these exclusive rulers
on the same footing as the Prophet.
The saga
of Hamza and Malaysia’s decision to arrest a transient passenger and
deport him to be tortured in Saudi Arabia must be taken gravely by Muslims and
non-Muslims alike, as correctly noted by British blogger/columnist Andrew Brown: “The case of Hamza Kashgari, a
young Saudi journalist who has just been deported from Malaysia to face trial
on charges of blasphemy, is one that should frighten and disgust anyone who
cares about freedom of speech or religion.”
As
barbaric as it may be, torture and execution are common practices under the
Saudi state’s Shariah law as evidenced by 79 executions in 2011 and 8 in
Jan. and Feb. 2012--the year just started.
The
repercussions of Hamza’s misfortune are dangerously multifaceted. The
Saudi regime wants to remind its already subjugated citizenry that although
they may run, they will have no place to hide, especially in Muslim countries.
The regime also wants to convince Muslims
worldwide that the Saudi rulers are the only true defenders of Islam, especially
at a time when Muslim parties are ascending to power in countries like
In addition, the Saudi autocracies want to remind
the beneficiaries of their largess and nepotism, especially the 56 members of
the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), headquartered in
However, the real target of Saudi religious and
economic intimidation and blackmail are Western democracies, their
institutionalized religious freedoms, and freedom of all forms of expression.
This is what the OIC’s sponsored United Nations (UN) Resolution 16/18 is
designed to accomplish: silence freedom of expression. It must be rejected by
“anyone who cares about freedom of expression and religion.”
Contrary
to its misleading tone and the disingenuous argument of its promoters,
defenders, appeasers and apologists in the West, UN Resolution 16/18
(“anti-religion defamation”) is intended to criminalize
freedom of speech and individual liberty, globally. The question that
Secretary Clinton and her European counterpart (s) must ask when they meet with
representatives of the OIC to discuss 16/18 is why criticism or defamation of
religion leads to violence only by Muslims in and out of their lands of
origins. If any more discussions of this anti-freedom-of-expression resolution
are necessary, they must be held publicly so Muslims and non-Muslims can see
and hear the damage 16/18 would do to them.
Finally,
UN Resolution 16/18 is predicated on the August 5, 1990 Arab Declaration on
Human Rights which unequivocally states that Shariah law supersedes all
civilizational norms and universally accepted declarations on human rights:
“Every man shall have the right, within the framework of
Shari’ah, to free movement and to select his place of residence
whether inside or outside his country and, if persecuted, is entitled to seek
asylum in another country” (Article12.) This is proof that if it were not
for Shariah law, Saudi writer Hamza would not have been arrested by the
Malaysian bandits and sent to be tortured in
Saudi
Government“…Promote the Values of Freedom, Justice and Equality?
CDHR’s Commentary: In a recent
speech to a large gathering of Muslim representatives in Latin America and the
Caribbean in
In fact, Muslims thrive in
non-Muslim countries than they do in their own. This is because they are
treated equally under the rule of non-sectarian laws that are applicable to all
citizens and residents of Western societies. None of this can be said about any
Muslim country, specifically
It’s well known that the
Saudis hand out substantial sums of money to Muslim organizations, Mosques and
religious schools throughout the
The Saudi strategy to empower
Muslim communities in the West and elsewhere are handled by top Saudi
government officials. In Feb. 2010, former Saudi Defence Minister,
Prince Sultan summoned the most powerful princes, financiers and clerics including
Saudi Foreign and Intelligence minister, minister of the treasury and a horde
of clerics and other officials to his lavish palace in Riyadh and instructed
them to increase their support for Muslim communities in their adopted
countries. He told them those communities should be able to build or develop
their Muslim identity within their areas of living.
Staying the Course is Unsustainable
CDHR’s Analysis: The
Saudi regime continues to rely on obsolete methods
of ruling their population at a time when domestic, regional, and global events
and trends demand drastic restructuring of the dated Saudi social, economic,
political, religious, and educational institutions. Despite its unprecedented income
derived from high petroleum prices, Saudi per capita income is the lowest of
all the Gulf Arab states. The country suffers from rampant corruption,
especially at the highest levels of government. This is due to a total lack of
accountability, transparency, freedom of the press, and the ruling
family’s control of the entire national income and treasury. Unemployment
among the youth, among men and women alike, remains very high because most of
the jobs in the country, from hotel receptionists to high tech experts, are
given to expatriates.
What seems to be incredibly
lacking is a coherent and forward-looking leadership that realizes the Saudi
people, especially the burgeoning youth population, are becoming more informed
and sophisticated, and they are increasingly aware of their legitimate social,
economic, and political rights as they compare their misfortune with the
fortunes of their counterparts regionally and globally. For their own survival
and for the country’s prosperity and stability, the autocratic and
theocratic Saudi dynasties ought to wake up and see reality for what it is, not
a desert mirage. The Saudi people are changing, the Arab World is changing, and
the world is changing while the ruling Saudi dynasties continue to pursue
policies whose time has passed many decades ago.
Due to its centrality to Islam and
its possession of large but dwindling quantities of petroleum
deposits—Venezuela has more oil reserves than Saudi Arabia
now—stability and security of Saudi Arabia are of major concern to
Muslims and non-Muslims. The Saudi rulers must change their pre-modern
thinking, however, and realize that it is only a matter of time before their
disenfranchised population will have no choice but to do what their
counterparts in the Arab World did and are still doing. The Saudi population
may take to the streets and rid themselves of oppression, corruption,
marginalization, and usurpation of their basic rights.
There are a few doable steps that
could easily be implemented immediately: free elections of the Shura Council,
granting women their full citizenship rights (including an end to the
destructive ban on driving), declaring the slave-like male guardian system
illegal, allowing for religious freedom, and putting an end to press
censorship. Opponents to these steps do not have to participate, but Princes
Naif and Salman can easily convince them not to stand in the way, especially
since the opponents to reform do so largely to show their support for the
rulers’ wishes.
A Glaring Warning to Saudis
CDHR’s Commentary: While the killing of a Saudi
diplomat, Khalaf Mohamamd S. Al Ali, in the Bangladeshi capital, Dhaka, on Tuesday,
March 6, 2012 may have been committed by a cold blooded thief, Saudi officials,
businesspeople, and house-wives should take notice of this tragedy. There are
hundreds of thousands of Bangladeshi laborers in
Not only do Bangladeshi
laborers and their families have axes to grind against the Saudis, but so too
do many of the liberal pro-democracy and non-sectarian citizens of
Arabs, Muslims, and non-Muslims
associate
“…no area better to excel in than the Holy
Qur'an”
CDHR’s Commentary: Saudi children are
pushed into competing in memorizing the Qur’an before they can understand
what it means. The skillful memorizers are financially compensated by Saudi
Defense Minister, Prince Salman. His objective is to ensure the continuity of the
rule of his family, whose legitimacy and ruling longevity depend on
Ingraining religion into
children’s minds is a long-term investment for the ruling Saudi elites.
Like Prince Salam, Interior
Minister and Crown Prince Naif cannot imagine a country without adherence
to a literal interpretation of the Qur’an and uncompromising enforcement
of its tenets by his well-known, ferocious religious police. Questioned
by a journalist in 2009, Prince Naif yelled, “The Kingdom is
an Islamic country. Therefore, the Commission of
Virtue Promotion and Vice Prevention will be present as long as Islam is present on the earth. The promotion of virtue
and prevention of vice, in accordance with the Qur’an and Sunnah, is a
major pillar of any Islamic country.”
These two princes now control the
country’s external and internal defense and security. They may end up in
the Saudi throne unless a palace coup d'état denies them that luxurious
inheritance. Naif is the apparent successor to King Abdullah, and Salman is
likely to be his Crown Prince. They are the last two members of the powerful
Sudairi Seven, seven full brothers born of King Abdul Aziz’s favorite
wife.
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