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Friday, April 13, 2007

Prince Naif Speaks Out Against Gender Segregation

The powerful Saudi Interior Minister, Prince Naif, told an audience of reporters, intellectuals and officials on April 9th that “Segregation of men and women is not correct.” He continued to say, “Society consists of both men and women...Women have their capabilities and they have a role to play which was given to them by the Creator...Women are our mothers, our sisters, and our wives.” This is a welcome change in Prince Naif’s attitude toward women specifically and toward changes in Saudi society in general. He has been known for being a staunch opponent of power sharing, empowerment of women and religious freedom.

Prince Naif is the only man in Saudi Arabia today who can take immediate action to eliminate the sources of gender segregation and limit the power of those who enforce such destructive and unnatural policies. He serves as the head of the religious police (Mutaween) whose job is to make sure men and women don’t mingle any where in public. With the power to reign in the power and scope of the religious police, Price Naif has what amounts to direct control over the speed and efficiency at which the desegregation of Saudi society can move forward.

It's time for the Saudi people, especially women, to put Prince Naif to the test and see if he means what he says or if his recent statements are no more than another ploy to appease the international community and silence the courageous Saudi men and women who are calling for eradication of all forms of discrimination against women, religious minorities and expatriates. The Center for Democracy and Human Rights in Saudi Arabia, located in Washington, supports all Saudi democratic and non-sectarian reformers.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=94756&d=9&m=4&y=2007

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Balancing Act: The Saudi Conundrum

Never in its recent history has the Saudi ruling dynasty been on shakier ground. Domestically, the threats of terrorist attacks are not declining, as Saudi senior princes would have the world believe. Saudis from every segment of society are demanding reform of the corrupt, inefficient, and undemocratic Saudi government institutions. Regionally, the Saudi dynasty is surrounded by violent conflicts in Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine that could easily spill over the kingdom's borders and plunge the country into sectarian strife. There was a time when the Saudi dynasty could play the role of peace-maker and emerge a triumphant regional champion while appeasing or silencing opponents at home. This practice seems to have run its course.


The Saudi dynasty has historically used religion as means of control over its people's lives, movements and thoughts. Under tremendous external pressure, especially from the U.S., and in an effort to appease powerful Shiite neighboring states Iran and Iraq, the dynasty has relaxed some restrictions on some religious minorities in the country. In return, minorities feel empowered and are demanding equality and an end to discriminatory polices based on religion. The government cannot go back and further restrict minorities from exercising their religious rights without risking outside intervention from Iran, Hezbollah, Iraq and some Shiite communities in the Gulf States.


At the same time, the government's extremist Wahhabi clerics, who provide the Saudi dynasty with its legitimacy, consider the Shiites "heretics" who pose threats to the country and its official religion. These extremists control public activities, behaviors and movements. They object to the Shiite "heretics" practicing their religious rituals freely and publicly. The dynasty has become a hostage of its own discriminatory policies, and consequently finds itself trying to balance volatile internal divisions and external pressures.


To avoid internal strife and external threats, the Saudi dynasty must collaborate with visionary citizen reformers to take new steps toward a more stable and prosperous country. With public encouragement from the U.S., a quantifiable political, social, religious, educational and economic reform agenda has to be developed, debated publicly, and implemented under a codified, non-sectarian constitution and bill of rights. This is attainable if the Saudi ruling dynasty is willing to put the people's interests before its own and share power with all citizens regardless of gender, religious, regional and tribal affiliation.


The empowerment of Saudi Shiites and subsequent reaction from Wahhabi extremists could lead to destructive internal strife. Constructive reform in Saudi Arabia will not happen without intense international pressure. As the birthplace of Islam, and the world's largest oil producer, Saudi Arabia's stability is central to international peace and security. The nation's fate should not be left to the devices of an autocratic, exclusionary and panicking dynasty.

Friday, August 25, 2006

Washington from a War Veteran’s View Point

By Siraj A. Alyami

Reading about and watching the inner workings of our democratic institutions and the shaping of our foreign policy on visual and print media differs greatly from actually being present in the Congressional Chambers, where policies are formulated, and the conference rooms of powerful organizations, where US official policies are strongly influenced. I had the unique opportunity to spend the summer of 2006 working at The Center for Democracy and Human Rights in Saudi Arabia (CDHR), located in Washing DC, observing the formulation of our nation’s policies. As a veteran army officer who served a tour in a war zone implementing my nation’s policies, I discovered the need to better understand the process of how policies are formulated and for what purpose.

As dangerous, harsh and ambiguous as my tour overseas was, it taught me a lot about what I have taken for granted; more importantly, what I should know in order to serve my country best. From my experience overseas, I have come to realize that a noble idea can easily develop into a situation that defeats the initial purpose and its intended objectives. I became aware of the large gap between the making and implementation of US foreign policy. During my invaluable experience in Washington this summer, made possible by a small scholarship from a supporter of CDHR, I learned that many policy “experts” and decision makers, whether for or against the US’s current foreign policy in Iraq and beyond, are largely removed from the realities on the ground.

My exposure to representative samples of warfare, culture, politics, society, religion, human interactions and ethnic divide, which differ immensely from the environment I was born into, was quite sobering. My interaction with people in Iraq, a region I assumed I understood but quickly realized knew little about, prompted me to further analyze our nation’s policies and stance towards Arab and Muslim States. I am now convinced, more than ever, that democratizing the Arab World, most notably Saudi Arabia, will not only serve the best interests of the people of that region, but will consequently benefit our strategic interests and those of other democratic societies worldwide. I am constantly faced with daunting questions I am struggling with and have only begun to answer them. While the Iraqis I met expressed their gratitude for the ousting of Saddam and his brutal police, they long for the stability and familiarity under his repressive rule. Although Iraqis were freed from Saddam’s tyrannical iron fist, the lack of a stable government and daily sustenance has created a void; a lesson policy makers should not take lightly.

While working at CDHR, I had the opportunity to visit officials and attend conferences and briefings sponsored by think tanks, human rights advocates, policy “experts,” and lobbyists. All of my activities in Washington were related to our nation’s policies, attitudes and historical relationships with Arab and Muslim regimes. Many congressional hearings and downtown meetings revolved around the topics of one cause versus another, who is right and who is wrong, who is our ally and who is not and what the US should or should not do. As I listened to these discussions, which often turned into meaningless finger pointing, I found myself instinctively transported to what I saw, learned and experienced during my tour in Iraq. I thought of the suffering Iraqis and brave American soldiers, who risk their lives to implement their nation’s policies, and what their reactions to these futile arguments would be.

Iraqis I interacted with expressed their desire for huriyah (liberty), demogratiyah (democracy), elm (education) and amin (security). In short, they yearned for a better future for themselves and their children. Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds, Christians, men, women and children alike expressed these sentiments. The toughest challenge I faced while serving in Iraq was how best to explain to these Iraqis that, although the current situation may seem grim, the empowering values they most strongly desired were in fact beginning to take root in their ravaged country. I refered to such accomplishments as: freedom of speech on TV and newspapers, free elections, and the ability to engage in open discussions on any topic without fear of arrest or punishment by secret police – an inherent right not enjoyed by citizens of neighboring countries. While they acknowledged these improvements and felt liberated from a vicious tyrant that ruled them for decades, they also felt more vulnerable than any other time in recent history. They felt a sense of nostalgia for the stability they once enjoyed under a fierce, yet predictable ruler.

In conclusion, I was able to expand my horizons during my stint in Washington just as much as during my tour in a war zone in a distant land. There is no escape from the dangerous realities of the Middle East. The region has the potential of causing an end to an era of relative peace, prosperity and respect for the rule of law in many countries. As much as many people would like us to leave the Middle East to its device, the Middle East problems will not leave us alone. Where do we go from here? My answer is empower the people of the region to govern themselves and feel good about their countries, religions and heritage.

How? Support a third choice. Presently, we are cowed into believing that we either have to choose between feudal and anti-democratic oligarchs or religious extremists. In fact, the difference between the two is miniscule if one dig little deeper. Millions of Arab Muslims, Christian, men and women are educated and know that the institutions that control every aspect of their lives are obsolete, oppressive and designed to serve a few ruling families.

Siraj Alyami was acting Deputy Director of CDHR during the summer of 2006. He is currently pursuing his Ph.D. in Political Science at the University of Missippi at Oxford.

An Intern’s View of Saudi Arabia’s Political Structure and its Influence in the World

Charles Jedlicka, Intern Research Assistant

Prior to my internship with The Center for Democracy and Human Rights in Saudi Arabia, my knowledge regarding The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was only slightly more than that of the average American. As a current Political Science student at Old Dominion University, my studies have exposed me to the fundamentals of Saudi Arabia; including, the political and economic power of its vast oil reserves, the religious significance of its housing the two holiest cities in Islam – Mecca and Medina, and its historically strategic alliance with the United States. Nevertheless, since joining The Center, almost three months ago, I have come to realize how uninformed I was. The archaic and draconian political system present in Saudi Arabia not only serves to repress millions of Saudi citizens, but is a danger to the democratic values and freedom of choice present throughout the free world.

While there is prevalent discussion among policy experts in Washington concerning Saudi human rights violations, the US Government is hesitant to push the House of Saud towards real reform in fear of disrupting the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf which may be caused by any political instability. The US’ intentional blindness towards Saudi oppression of its own citizens and its continued support of the Saudi Monarchy for the sake of political stability reminds me of the time when the US supported the Shah of Iran. US policy makers would do well, however, to remember the result of the Shah’s unwillingness to reform - a violent revolution and the instillation of a religious theocracy. In addition, the American people need to be made aware of how the foreign and domestic policies of Saudi Arabia are affecting them. The American government, inline with its current democracy doctrine, needs to pressure the Saudi Monarchy to enact real, not superficial, reforms towards creating democratic institutions which may reduce extremism by enhancing the quality of life for its citizens and others throughout the region; consequently the rest of the world. Read more

As I read, attend meetings and learn more about Saudi Arabia, I am learning just how suffocating the ruling family’s grip on Saudi Arabia and its people is; an absolute monarchy significantly more authoritarian and controlling than any pre-enlightenment Europian state. The government, under the House of Saud, controls every aspect of a citizen’s life; failure to conform to the strict religious laws governing The Kingdom, as interpreted by a small cadre of ulama (a group of austere religious men), results in life long stigmatization, unemployment, incarceration, or worse. The House of Saud is propped up and given legitimacy by the clerics in Saudi Arabia. The state religion is Wahhabism, an uncompromising sect of Islam that is inherently anti-western and anti-democratic. In return for turning a blind eye to the government’s lavish spending of state funds and other hypocritical policies, the clerics are rewarded monetarily and granted religious authority to carry out the government’s policies of intimidation, spying and forced conformity. Religious zealots have turned the strictness and lack of opportunity in Saudi society into a worldwide problem.

Lack of non-religious education limits employment opportunities for the average Saudi citizen breeding resentment among the population towards the rest of the world that is quickly passing them by. Clerics enhance this resentment through blistering speeches that condemn “the West” and blame it for all of the Saudi people’s woes. Anger, produced by the feeling of hopelessness, generates extremism. So as not to turn this extremism against them, the Saudi government creates an outlet by willfully providing support and funding to religious extremists who in turn export their ideology across the globe.

Since coming to Washington, I have continuously heard evidence of the methods in which the Saudi system undermines democratic values. At a roundtable discussion, Dr. Kamal Hossain - a Bangladeshi Parliament member, former Supreme Court Justice, and author of the country’s secular constitution - revealed that “petrodollars” from the Arabian Peninsula were helping finance fundamentalist religious schools and arm militant extremists that have recently taken root in his country, one which was previously void of this sort of violence and intolerance.

During a congressional staff briefing titled “Religious Freedom and Human Rights in Russia”, I witnessed members of The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom attest to the fact that a large number of Imams in Russia’s Muslim population had been trained in Saudi Arabia. This has led to increasing trends in Islamic extremism in Russia and the former Soviet Republics; most notably Chechnya, where resistance to Russian forces - traditionally led by nationalist separatists - is now largely commanded by Islamic extremists who use increasingly violent means against civilian populations.

During a lecture at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright condemned the Saudi Government for its religious oppression. She also expressed her opinion that the meetings at Camp David, during President Clinton’s term, were largely unsuccessful due to the fact that Yasser Arafat was unable to make large concessions without Saudi approval. With the current violence in southern Lebanon, the fact that the Saudi’s undermined this opportunity for peace makes it even more tragic.

Currently the Saudi’s are calling for the disarmament of Hezbollah, not because they seek to promote peace or democracy in Lebanon, but rather, because they view Hezbollah as an agent of Iran. The Saudi Monarchy and its Wahabi clerics view themselves as the protectors of the pure and true form of Islam. Iran, with its influence over the Shiite Muslims in the Middle East, is viewed as the largest obstacle to Saudi political hegemony in the region and religious authority over Muslims world wide.

AIDS in Saudi Arabia: An Unspeakable Threat


By Alix McKenna

Since the first reported AIDS case in Saudi Arabia in 1984, the kingdom repeatedly claims that a remarkably low number of people are suffering from the disease. However the figures have gone up dramatically increased from a reported 436 cases between 1984 and 2000 to 6,787 cases in 2003[1] and it continues to climb to a reported 10,120 in 2006.[2] Given the fact that scientific surveys are not allowed in Saudi Arabia, the government’s severe censorship and the stigma attached to deadly diseases, these figures may only represent a fraction of the spread of AIDS in Saudi Arabia.

While on the surface, these figures seem insignificant in comparison to the astronomical AIDS rate in other parts of the world such as Africa, the speed at which the infection is spreading has resulted in a disturbing response from policy makers and society at large. The government’s efforts to curb the epidemic focus on controlling the behavior of AIDS victims, emphasizing Islamic sexual morals and preventing panic amongst the population. Unfortunately, this approach has proved heavy-handed, insensitive to human rights and from all sides ineffective.

The most disturbing component of the Saudi government’s approach to dealing with the spike in AIDS cases is its treatment of the AIDS victims themselves, particularly if they were born in other countries. Saudi officials view the epidemic as a foreign threat. Of the 10,120 AIDS victims, 7,804 are foreign nationals.[3] This could be due to the fact that Saudis have learned to become secretive people and are afraid to report AIDS cases in fear of being stigmatized or even punished for their sexual behavior. In response to higher numbers of AIDS victims in Saudi Arabia, all foreigners are required to take an AIDS test upon entering the country, and every time they use the public health system. If it is discovered that they are infected with the AIDS virus, they are locked up, often six at a time, in caged hospital rooms awaiting deportation.

Although the Kingdom is a phenomenally wealthy welfare state and provides its own citizens with anti-retroviral treatment free of cost, foreign nationals are denied medication. Depending on their country of origin, the deportation process often takes up to six months to a year. A 2005 article in the Canadian Globe and Mail newspaper described the plight of a Palestinian national who had been confined to a cell for six months without being administered retroviral drugs. In another instance, a man born in Saudi Arabia to parents of Burmese origin languished for a year without medication before being deported.

The Saudi policy of locking up HIV positive foreigners is not only inhumane; it reveals a lack of understanding for the true nature of the problem. Immigrants comprise nearly 25% of the population in Saudi Arabia. In addition to performing jobs that Saudis view as demeaning, they are forced to live in run down and repressive compounds where prostitution and drug use are rampant.[4] The Saudi government and businessmen, who import millions of expatriates to keep their economy afloat, should be concerned with improving the living conditions of immigrant workers rather than confining and deporting those who are afflicted with HIV.

While Saudi nationals are coerced into abiding by absolute laws regarding their sexual behavior, the government exonerates itself from its obligations toward poor expatriates. Furthermore, female immigrant workers are provided with no protection from sexual abuse at the hands of employers. Of the millions of foreign women who work as domestic servants in the homes of Saudis, many of them are subjected to repeated sexual assault without any protection or recourse. The Saudi ruling family, who controls every aspect of people’s lives, behaviors and sources of income, rarely concerns itself with these matters.

Although AIDS victims from the expatriate community, who are looked down upon by Saudis, are treated particularly inhumanely, Saudi citizens with an HIV status are also disrespected. In Saudi Arabia, any sexual conduct outside wedlock is viewed as sinful and therefore the government severely restricts any form of contact or communication between the sexes. This form of control and repressive method of dealing with issues of sexuality adversely affects the AIDS epidemic within the Kingdom. To begin with, the lack of sexual education prevents people from becoming aware on how to avoid STDs and stigmatizes those already infected as sexual deviants – explaining why few people voluntarily get tested resulting in a low number of diagnoses. Although citizens are provided with treatment, they are treated in a humiliating and often abusive way by health officials and society at large. In 2003, BBC reported on a tragic story in which a terminally ill AIDS patient was thrown out of a hospital in Jeddah and literally dumped in the street. Since the hospital did not specialize in treating AIDS patients, the Red Crescent was asked to transfer the patient to another hospital. The Red Crescent refused, on the grounds that it does not transfer AIDS patients, and so the patient was placed in the clinic’s pick up truck and dumped on the side walk in front of his employer’s office, where he was left bruised and bleeding. [5]

The stigma against sex outside of marriage affects not only the treatment of AIDS patients, but also the manner in which the AIDS prevention program in the Kingdom is administered. In order to prevent the dissemination of the illness, it is vital that information regarding safe sex and the sexual nature of the epidemic is made available. It is also imperative that an AIDS prevention program bases its strategy not on the sexual ideals of Islam, but on the sexual reality of modern life, which includes homosexuality, prostitution and other activities that are frequently connected to the spread of HIV. Even discussing aspects of sexuality not condoned by Islam can sometimes lead to punishment. In 2003, a General Court in Riyadh sentenced high school and middle school teacher Muhammad al-Sahimi to three years in prison and 300 lashes for declaring that Islam permits (among other things), adultery, homosexuality, and masturbation.[6] AIDS is seen by politicians, clerics and even medical researchers not as a unique problem that requires a reality-based solution, but as another excuse to impose conservative morality on the populace. In 2004, researchers from the Ministry of Health and the King Abdulaziz University published an 18 year surveillance report on AIDS in Saudi Arabia. The authors suggest that in order to limit the spread of the infection, the Kingdom should encourage people to “follow and implement the Islamic rules and values that prohibit adultery, homosexuality and intravenous drug use, and to practice safe sex only through legal marriage.”[7]

In the last two years there have been some signs that the Kingdom is becoming more open to other views on the topic of prevention, but the general attitude has not dramatically changed. In 2005, the UN was given permission to launch an AIDS awareness workshop for 25 students in a Riyadh private school. UN Coordinators stated that it was their hope that similar workshops would be allowed in other private schools, followed by the widespread implementation of workshops in government schools. Additional workshops have been held, but a nation-wide initiative is nowhere in sight.[8] Other developments in recent years imply that the Kingdom is regressing in their handling of the epidemic. The fact that the number of reported AIDS cases has been increasing at such an alarming rate in the past few years suggests that the Kingdom’s techniques for measuring the crisis are either not entirely accurate or not entirely honest. Last February, an article in Asharq Alawsat raised questions about the accuracy of Saudi statistics. The expose revealed that an official from the Ministry of Health criticized Dr. Aisha Metwalli, a female consultant at King Abdulaziz hospital in Jeddah, for her statement at a women’s conference that the latest statistics show 72,380 AIDS cases in the Kingdom. While this number is disturbingly higher than other reported figures, the government’s response to her claims was equally frightening. Rather than denying Metwalli’s claims, the official declared that they were not necessarily true and stated that her comments were inappropriate because only administrators within the Agency for Preventive Medicine, a branch of the Ministry of Health, are entitled to deal with that information.[9]

Rather than seeing AIDS as a pressing problem requiring a reality-based solution, Saudi politicians, clerics and even medical researchers view the epidemic as another excuse to impose conservative morality on the populace. In 2004, researchers from the Ministry of Health and the King Abdulaziz University published an 18 year surveillance report on AIDS in Saudi Arabia. The authors suggest that in order to limit the spread of the infection, the kingdom should encourage people to “follow and implement the Islamic rules and values that prohibit adultery, homosexuality and intravenous drug use, and to practice safe sex only through legal marriage.”[10]

Over the last two years, there have been some signs that the kingdom is becoming more open to other perspectives on prevention, but the general attitude has not changed drastically. In 2005, the UN was allowed to launch an AIDS awareness workshop for 25 students in a Riyadh private school. UN Coordinators stated that it was their hope that similar workshops would be allowed in other private schools, followed by the widespread implementation of workshops in government schools. More workshops have been held, but a nation-wide initiative is nowhere in sight. Moreover, other recent developments suggest that the kingdom is moving backwards in their handling of the epidemic. Although undeniably low, the number of reported AIDS cases has been increasing at such an unstable rate in the past few years, that one might suspects that the kingdom’s techniques for measuring the crisis are either unreliable or not entirely honest.

Last February, an article in Asharq Alawsat raised some questions about the accuracy of Saudi statistics. This expose reported that an official from the ministry of health criticized Dr. Aisha Metwalli, a female consultant at King Abdulaziz hospital in Jeddah. Dr. Metwalli was singled out for stating at a women’s conference that the latest statistics counted 72,380 people with AIDS in Saudi Arabia.[11] Although this figure is significantly higher than official statistics, other reports by AIDS workers support her claim. According to a recent New York Times article, one Saudi doctor estimates that 80,000 people are infected.[12] The government response to Dr. Metwalli’s statement was almost as disturbing as her findings. Rather that refuting Metwalli’s figures, the official simply declared that they were not necessarily true. He also condemned her comments as inappropriate because only administrators within the Agency for Preventive Medicine, a branch of the Ministry of Health, are entitled to use that information.

If Saudi Arabia is going to effectively combat the spread of AIDS, it is imperative that the public and all members of the government comprehend the scale of the epidemic. The lack of transparency on this issue shows that the Saudi leaders are afraid of the disease, but not for the right reasons. The government should be worried about the health of its people and the prevention of further infections. Unfortunately, officials are more worried about the political and religous implications of the illness. AIDS symbolizes the failure of the Kingdom to impose Islamic sexual morality on its people and to keep out a destructive foreign influence. Although it is low, the AIDS rate is rising quickly. The government must discontinue its denial of the reality of AIDS and the reality of its citizen’s sexual behavior or the number of casualties could skyrocket.

Sources:

  • “U.N. Launches HIV/AIDS Awareness Campaign in Saudi Arabia With Workshop for Teenagers” Medical News Today. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=31776 October 10, 2005
  • Fattah, Hassan M “Saudi Arabia Begins to Face Hidden Aids Problem” in The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/08/world/middleeast/08saudi.html?pagewanted=1 August 8, 2006.
  • Madani, Tariq A,and Al-Mazrou, Yagob Y, and Al-Jeffri, Mohammed H and Al-Huzaim, Nasser S. Department of Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah and Ministry of Health, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Epidemiology of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus in Saudi Arabia; 18-Year Surveillance Results and Prevention from an Islamic Perspective. In BMC Infectious Diseases. 2004.


[1] Saudi Arabia Steps up Measures to Combat AIDS” in BBC News. http://archive.gulfnews.com/articles/06/06/24/10048990.html October 23, 2003

[2] Al Hakeem, Mariam “Saudi Arabia steps up measures to combat AIDS” in Gulf News. http://archive.gulfnews.com/articles/06/06/24/10048990.html June 24, 2006

[3] “Saudi Arabia Steps up Measures to Combat AIDS” in BBC News. http://archive.gulfnews.com/articles/06/06/24/10048990.html October 23, 2003

[4] Mackinnon, Mark “Saudis Jail, Deport Foreigners with HIV” in Globe and Mail. www.globeandmail.com September 8. 2005

[5] “Saudi clinic 'dumps' Aids patient” in BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3161648.stm October 3, 2003

[7] Madani, Tariq A,and Al-Mazrou, Yagob Y, and Al-Jeffri, Mohammed H and Al-Huzaim, Nasser S. Department of Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah and Ministry of Health, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Epidemiology of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus in Saudi Arabia; 18-Year Surveillance Results and Prevention from an Islamic Perspective. In BMC Infectious Diseases. 2004.

[8] “U.N. Launches HIV/AIDS Awareness Campaign in Saudi Arabia With Workshop for Teenagers” Medical News Today. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=31776 October 10, 2005

[9]

[10] Madani, Tariq A,and Al-Mazrou, Yagob Y, and Al-Jeffri, Mohammed H and Al-Huzaim, Nasser S. Department of Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah and Ministry of Health, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Epidemiology of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus in Saudi Arabia; 18-Year Surveillance Results and Prevention from an Islamic Perspective. In BMC Infectious Diseases. 2004.

[11] Saudi Arabia: Ministry of Health Official Angry at Saudi Aids Rate Revelation” in Asharq Alawsat. http://www.asharq-e.com/news.asp?section=1&id=3887 February 22, 2006

[12] “U.N. Launches HIV/AIDS Awareness Campaign in Saudi Arabia With Workshop for Teenagers” Medical News Today. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=31776 October 10, 2005

Fattah, Hassan M “Saudi Arabia Begins to Face Hidden Aids Problem” in The New York Times.

Monday, July 17, 2006

A Basement Bargain

The former Saudi Ambassador to the US, Prince Bandar, is selling his mansion In Aspen, Colorado for a bargain, $135 million. This is just another illustration of how the Saudi royal family lives a life of excess at the expense of the nation's people.
The following story off CNN.com gives all the details of the offer.

Saudi prince's Aspen getaway has $135 million price tag Wednesday, July 12, 2006; Posted: 8:09 a.m. EDT (12:09 GMT)

ASPEN, Colorado (AP) -- The getaway of Saudi Prince Bandar is up for sale for an asking price of $135 million, which could set a U.S. sales record, according to published reports.

Real estate agent Joshua Saslove said in a statement to The Aspen Times and the Aspen Daily News that Bandar's 15-bedroom, 16-bathroom 56,000-square-foot mansion -- complete with a racquetball court, indoor pool, and outdoor water features -- is up for sale because the prince is too busy to enjoy his mountain palace.

The offering includes several small homes on the 95-acre property.

Saslove said Bandar has been busy chairing his country's security council and spending too much time in Washington.

Bandar served as the Saudi ambassador to the United States from 1983 to 2005. He bought the property above Aspen in 1989 and built the main residence in 1991.

Pitkin County Assessor's Office valued the main residence at $55.95 million, an estimate deputy assessor Larry Fite said is conservative.

"All of our values are based on comparable sales. Well, what do you compare this to?" he said.

Donald Trump's mansion in Palm Beach, Florida, up for sale for $125 million, was expected to set the record, according to Forbes' Most Expensive Homes 2006. Trump's refurbished Maison de L'Amitie includes a ballroom, 100-foot-long swimming pool and 475 feet of oceanfront.



Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Saudis in quest for a 'Luther' to bring tolerant Islam

As Dr. Madawi Al-Rasheed eloquently and capably illustrates, unless the fundamentals of the Saudi political structure are transformed from the top down, Islam will be used as means of oppression, intolerance, deprivation, confusion, segregation and as a deadly tool to legitimate the absolute control of one family over a nation of twenty six million people. Her article below was published on SaudiDebate.com, which is an excellent place to find diverse views on problems with Saudi Arabia and the Mid East. As always don't forget to check out our website at www.cdhr.info



Saudis in quest for a 'Luther' to bring tolerant Islam
SaudiDebate.com Sunday, 11 June 2006

By Madawi Al-Rasheed


Luther fought against ecclesiastical abuse, indulgences and papal authority. He also advocated the doctrine of ‘justification by faith alone’. By nailing his ninety-five theses to the door of the Wittenberg Cathedral, he changed the history of Europe forever.

After 9/11, politicians, research centers and think tanks in the West wished that a Saudi Luther would emerge to free Islam from so-called ‘radical interpretations’ and ‘preachers-of-hate’. Both the US and the Saudi regime hoped that the emergence of a Luther would deliver Saudis from the grip of radicalism and into the arms of tolerance.

Freedom House’s recent damning report on the revised Saudi religious curriculum concludes that, when it comes to Saudi religious education, plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose. The report emphasized that the revised curriculum simply repeats previous bigotry against Christians, Jews and other Muslims.

The media coverage of this report was a major set-back to the ‘charm-offensive’ of Saudi foreign minister, Saud al-Faysal and his brother Turki al-Faysal, Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to Washington. Pro-Saudi representatives of US Muslim associations launched a counter-attack to discredit both the report and it authors.

An important dimension in the debate on the Saudi religious textbooks is often forgotten. Saudi authoritarianism itself is predicated on the very same religious interpretations that would form the target of a Lutheran-type Reformation. Consequently, a Saudi Luther, propagating the kind of moderate and rational religious thinking advocated by Freedom House, would actually undermine the Saudi regime, at least in its current form.

Not just words

Calls for changes in Saudi religious texts formed an important plank of the ‘War on Terror’. For perhaps the first time, the enemy was believed to thrive on a school curriculum, old religious textbooks and medieval Islamic interpretations. The West is joined in this quest by authoritarian Arab regimes threatened by a variety of Islamists. Yet both assume that these texts are inspiring contemporary violence and terrorism rather than the context within which these radical interpretations find resonance.

It is more likely that Jihadis are more inspired by Jihadi nashid (songs and recitations), media images of death and horror in Iraq, Palestine, Chechnya and Afghanistan, and internet sermons by Bin Laden, than by Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab’s treatise on Tawhid, Jihad and the Age of Ignorance. It is highly unlikely that the four London bombers of 7/7 had read Ibn Taymiyya’s epistle on Jihad, Ibn Abd al-Wahhab’s treatise on despots or Abdul Salam Faraj’s, the Neglected Duty. They were more likely to have watched images of death and destruction in Muslim lands on Western media, and were definitely not a product of the Saudi education system.

A Luther who will propagate civil and moderate Islam, according to the specifications of American think tanks such as Freedom House or Rand, may never emerge in Saudi Arabia. The insistence of Western literature that the Muslim world is experiencing a European-style reformation is misconceived. We are not witnessing a Muslim reformation – at least not in the heartland of Islam. The concept of reformation is deeply rooted in European history, the relation between church and power, and other prevalent socio-economic conditions.

Ulama at a loss

The religious Reformation in the Europe of the 16th century needed a Pope for a Luther to emerge. In other words there is no Luther without a Pope. In Islam there has never been a Pope and therefore there will never be a Luther to lead such a Reformation. In theory sanctity in Islam rests in the word of God, the Quran, rather than the word of men. To this extent, Luther ended where Islam began.

In Saudi Arabia, like in many other Arab and Muslim countries, we are witnessing transformation whose main characteristic is the fragmentation of religious authority. This fragmentation has been brought about by factors such as mass education, literacy, and new communication technology, all of which have encouraged the dismantling of religious hierarchies and monopolies, especially that of the ulama (religious scholars). The Saudi state turned such ulama into religious functionaries whose main function was to legitimate its authoritarian rule.

The ulama lost their independence and source of income under the umbrella of the nation-state. Their main function was to legitimate state policy and safeguard the piety of the realm. While they never controlled or influenced politics, the economy, international relations and defence, today they are gradually losing control over religious interpretation and society. The ulama have to compete with so many other interpreters of the tradition, both dead and alive. The emergence of the modern Muslim thinker, often a product of Western education, threatened the monopoly of traditional ulama.

Rational radicals

As a world religion with no established religious hierarchy (even if states since ancient times have struggled to establish such a hierarchy), Islam will always be subject to multiple interpretations of its texts. Muslims, who interpret the text, are grounded in specific social, political and historical contexts and are bound to see the text through the lens of such contexts. Desired ‘civil’ religious interpretations will neither emerge nor become hegemonic because the historical and political context makes radical interpretations rather than so called ‘modernist’ civil Islam resonate with substantial number of people inside Saudi Arabia and beyond.

A civil and moderate Islamic discourse had always existed in the Muslim world since the medieval time of the Mutazilah rationalist school of theology. But this heritage failed to become hegemonic in the Muslim world, except among a small minority of the intellectual religious elite. Islamist modernists remained cocooned in universities and intellectual circles, or in prisons – in the case of those who live in places like Iran. In Saudi Arabia, they remain muted. Authoritarian states define them as ‘the enemy’.

Saudi sponsorship of religious interpretations meant that the religious discourse that legitimates authoritarian rule became widely spread, in contrast to interpretations which call for unleashing the power of reason to handle religious texts. Also Saudi religious interpretations made Jihad haram, forbidden, at home and halal (acceptable) abroad, until Saudi Jihadis brought back the struggle to their own territory.

Fear of reason

Respecting religious tradition rather than critically assessing this tradition was a position conducive to the perpetuation of repressive regimes. Applying reason in the process of interpreting religious texts and the tradition in general will inevitably lead to questioning authoritarian rule. Applying a rationalist approach to the tradition – especially the one that invokes maqasid al-sharia, the purposes of Islamic law – may lead one to conclude that God wanted the faithful to fight domination, establish justice, and encourage tolerance. Authoritarian regimes always try to suppress applying reason to the interpretation of the tradition. They prefer rote learning and memorising the tradition.

Saudi petrodollar privileged a confrontational religious discourse with the world to the detriment of modernist and rationalist interpretations. To guard against the dispersal of oil wealth and the flux of immigrants from all over the world, old radical and exclusionist interpretations thrived, which amounted to xenophobia clothed in a religious cloak
. Saudi authoritarian rule needed an exclusionist religious discourse purely for internal consumption, to legitimate a political system that from the very beginning presented itself as the guardian of pure Islam and protector of true Muslims. Muslims who lived outside the Saudi ‘land of piety’ were considered blasphemous.

Commanders of the faithful

The foundation narrative of the Saudi state assumed that all Muslims were blasphemous (sacrilegious) except those who subscribed to its own religious interpretations and become subservient to its political will. Religious interpretations enforced the view that only territories under the rule of the Al-Saud are pious geographies. In order to maintain the piety of these geographies, a radical Islam denouncing all other Muslims flourished.

Today this religious discourse has backfired and began to haunt those who initially sponsored it. The same Saudi religious discourse that accused all other Muslims of blasphemy is now turned against the Saudi regime itself, as this regime is labelled a regime of blasphemy by Bin Laden and many religious scholars. While previously state sponsored religious interpretations declared other Arab and Muslim leaders as blasphemous, for example Nasser, Qaddafi, Bourguiba, Khomeini and Saddam, today the Al-Saud themselves are considered blasphemous and unfit to rule.

The establishment of the Saudi state was based on mass excommunication of other Muslims. Today the Al-Saud themselves and their ulama are declared blasphemous by people who had been brought up on Saudi religious interpretations.

It is impossible to drop Saudi religious interpretations and keep the Al-Saud. The two go together and have been linked for more than two hundred and fifty years. One cannot survive without the other. Dropping radical religious interpretations would deprive the Saudi regime of its identity, legitimacy and raison d’etre. Without these interpretations there will never be a Saudi regime.

New voices?

After 9/11 several young Saudis converted from jihadism to moderate humanist Islam. They continue to appear on Saudi-owned Arab satellite television stations propagating their new faith. They claim to have repented. The media hailed those converts as the new voices of reform. The redeemed are indulged at home and in the West for abandoning their Jihadi past, in much the same way that modern Saudi authors are indulged when they include three to four pages about adolescent sex in their novels. Many appear fascinated by Saudi radicalism and sex, yet neither should be seen as reforming or liberating!

Religious conversions are not only apparent among a less sophisticated group of young men who years ago set video shops ablaze in their quest to purify the land of Islam from blasphemy and debauchery but is also evident among established religious scholars. One sophisticated convert to so-called ‘moderate Islam’ is a famous ex-Sahwi religious scholar with a substantial social base, who is now re-inventing himself as a moderate, rational Islamist. He has become a regular fixture on Saudi-owned Arab satellite television screens where he develops a kind of “civilised Islam” suitable for Arab television viewers.

Other Saudis convert from moderate Islam to jihadism. They flourish on internet discussion boards where they send defiant messages. They make their presence felt through a combination of violence and new media appearances.

The new imperialism


The more that Saudis have access to literacy, education, printing and media, the more religious discourse will fragment and proliferate. There is no single credible religious or political authority in the world of Islam today. Religion and politics are de-centred in the Muslim world. Think about Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, Indonesia and Malaysia and you will get the picture of a fragmented universe with no state capable of playing a leading role. State controlled pan-Arab and pan-Islamic organisations have lost their credibility.

After 9/11 the USA took an interest in Saudi religious textbooks. For the US to think that it can control religious discourse reflects the arrogance of military might. The American imperialist project of today may be contrasted with those of the past, such as Britain’s. The latter was mainly concerned with trade routes, strategic locations and economic resources. For a long time Britain turned a blind eye when it encountered young Hindu women throwing themselves over the ashes of their dead husbands and did not intervene except at a later phase in its Imperial history. As long as there were tribal sheikhs, Rajputs, and Maharajahs, Britain was happy to let them run the show in return for honouring British interests. Britain never contemplated changing other people’s culture, religion or way of life. Perhaps Imperial Britain was too arrogant to consider the possibility of the natives becoming one day a mirror of Britain. Perhaps Imperial Britain cared only about raw materials and trade.

The current American project resembles that of Imperial France. America wants to rekindle the Napoleonic, universalistic dream that so far has lived in slogans rather than practice.

Awaiting tolerance

To achieve the desired kind of Islam from the point of view of the West, the right context must prevail. Against a previous ‘glorious’ contribution to the world, today Muslims in general have failed to make an impression, except though violence. Their territories host foreign armies against the wishes of the people but with the blessing of authoritarian regimes. Their territories welcome local and foreign torture camps without the ability to investigate those camps. Their children continue to die at the hands of powerful armies, invading under the pretext of the ‘War on Terror’ or liberating them from dictatorships. Muslim men are interred in camps and prisons where they are tortured and abused. Muslims slaughter each other on the basis of sectarian divides. Their economies are crippled by corruption and poverty. Muslims are consumers of global flows rather than initiators of these flows, with the exception of gifted natural resources. Schools are hardly functioning even in the wealthiest states. Women are excluded from full participation in the work force – not surprising, when men suffer from very high unemployment rates, reaching 30 per cent of the work force in Saudi Arabia. The welfare state is crumbling under demographic explosion and corruption. Economic liberalisation and privatisation promise to improve the dysfunctional welfare system and replace it with efficient services, beyond the reach of most citizens.

Once the right context is dominant, there will emerge a tolerant Islamic tradition. Even then, radical interpretations will not disappear altogether. They will simply stop making sense to people. A secure religious tradition that feels unthreatened from outside or within can tolerate radical fringe interpretations. Today, neither Islam nor Muslims are secure. Their insecurity has also made the West insecure. Saudis and the West may never see a Luther. In the meantime, observers of the Saudi scene will have to content themselves with Anabaptists and other religious dissenters who challenge the status quo.

African Mistreatment in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia has an immense immigrant worker population and the country's economy could not function without these expatriots. However, because of the laws of the Saudi system, many of these foreign workers are better off than slaves. They come to the country to work for someone and must do as they say or be expelled. Often they are forced to live in deplorable conditions and are not paid the amount that they were promised before arival. The cases of abuse of Asian workers inthe Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has been well documented, but incresingly mistreatment of Africans in the Kingdom is being unearthed. Slavery was outlawed in Saudi Arabis in the last 50 years, but the servitude many foreign workers are kept in because of the color of their skin is little better. The story below documents a specific example of the plight of Africans working in Saudi Arabia.


May, 9, 2005, RABI-UL-THANI 1, 1426
Issue No. 10149 ISSN (1320-0326)
The Saudi Gazette
JEDDAH

By SABRIA S. JAWHAR

THE number you have called cannot be reached at the moment. This is the
message you ll receive if you call Habeeb Al-Shami, a Chadian, on his mobile
phone. Try to call any other time and the call would not be answered because
dead people don t answer the phone.

Shami passed away a month ago in Jeddah as he was running from pillar to
post to get a reentry visa to go see his dead brother and attend the funeral
in Chad.

But, like the rest of the Chadian community in the Kingdom, he had been

denied the visa.


On the advice of his friends, he then wrote a letter to the Emir of Makkah

region asking for help. The Emir responded positively and gave him the
permission to go and see his dead brother.

But then, death struck again and, before going home, Shami died.


Shami was among the 17 Chadian community representatives in
Saudi Arabia who
had sent a petition to the Saudi Human Rights Association about the plight
of the community.

The Saudi Gazette received a copy of the complaint written in Arabic and in
two A4-sized pages.

The community leaders insist it is not a complaint against the government.


Its only a statement to the government itself to revaluate its stand and

look at our situation either deport us or renew our Iqamas, said Ali Haggar
Sinousi, one of the 17 signatories of the petition.

The statement as the leaders call the petition was headed by a Qudsi Hadith
that says: I (Allah) forbade myself to do injustice and it is forbidden for
my servant to do injustice

The petition was about a Ministry of Interior directive that wasn t

preceded by any warning that stops the Passports and Immigration Department
from renewing any Chadian Iqama or transferring any Chadian s sponsorship. A
Passports official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed receipt
of such an order.

According to the statement, the directive also stops Chadians from getting a
re-entry visa.

Dr. Hussein Al-Sharief who heads the rights association branch in Jeddah

confirmed receipt of the petition.

He said they have sent an inquiry letter to the interior ministry to
double-check the allegations and to obtain a copy of the said directive in
order to examine whether it is in line with international norms. He said
they are waiting for an answer from the ministry.

This directive, Sinousi said, has affected the legal Chadian workers in the

Kingdom as their children are stopped from attending school and their bank
accounts are closed until they correct their legal position get their
expired Iqamas renewed.

Referring to the arrests of thousands of Chadian nationals during the
Ministry of Interior s recent crackdown on crime in different cities,
Sinousi said the Chadian community in the Makkah region considers the action
as punishment for the entire community just for the crimes of some of its
individuals.

In the statement, the community leaders said the decree, by being limited
only to Chadians, makes them feel humiliated.

Sinousi works for Hijaz Cargo Company in Jeddah as a senior official. He

said Sunday that his Iqama would expire within 10 days. He hoped that the
decree would be revised by then.

The Chadian Consul General in Jeddah, Abdelkerim Koiboro, said that they
have nothing to do with the statement and that it s mainly a public action
that wasn t motivated by any diplomatic stimulation.

They came to the consulate inquiring about the reasons behind that decree

that stops them from renewing their Iqamas but we have no answer for them.

He said that a delegation led by the Chadian minister of security had
arranged a visit to the Kingdom in order to discuss the issue with the Saudi
officials but that they were told by the Saudi Foreign Ministry that the
authorized officials were busy at the determined time and that they would
inform them about the right time.

The visit proposal was preceded by an unofficial inquiry letter sent to the
Saudi Ministry of Interior by a Chadian resident asking about their destiny
as they can t visit their families back home even in cases of death and
sickness. They received no answer.

That letter wasn't an official one nor was it sent through the consulate or

the embassy, Koiboro said, We have our own diplomatic channels, but we hope
that they answer them back soon.

Koiboro and Sinousi declined to comment on the increasing number of Chadians

who were arrested during the recent raids against illegal residents
violateing the residency and immigration regulations.

However, Sinousi said each individual is responsible for his deeds.

We ve expressed our readiness to cooperate with the Saudi government to
hand over those who commit crimes and hide among us but this group
punishment shouldn t last long, he said.

He remarked about coverage of the security raids by some Arabic newspapers
that exaggerate and dub any African criminal a Chadian, which damages the
image of Chadians in Saudi society.

This when the majority of Chadian expatriates are good citizens who were
born and bred in the Kingdom, Sinousi said, and know neither the Chadian
language nor the color of the Chadian flag.

We don t care even if those who commited violations or did criminal work
are executed, he said. We care about the legal workers who have never done
any wrong in the community.

Addressing social crimes should not reach the level of a political act, he
said. Crimes happen in every society and are committed by different
nationalities not only Chadians.

He believes that whatever the reasons behind that decision, the Chadi
embassy should have been officially informed and they, as citizens, should
also have be informed through their embassy or the Passport office instead
of being shut out and getting no answer.

Korboro and Sinousi did not blame the Saudi government for whatever action
they are taking as they realize that the flood of overstayers can hardly be
controlled with the increasing numbers of foreign Haj and Umrah pilgrims.

They are unable to estimate the number of Chadian overstayers in the Kingdom
but they put the number of legal Chadian residents at more than 100,000
distributed mainly among Jeddah, Makkah and Madina. Most Chadians, Sinousi
said, work in private companies as clerks and computer programmers. Yet, the
majority holds low level-jobs as they lack proper education.

Unlike most other nationalities, Chadian families are larger, sometimes up
to 20 or 30 members a family.

A man who doesn t have at least two wives is not a complete man, Sinousi
said.

Democratizing Iraq is a tyrannical Arab regime's worst nightmare

While things may look bad for the prospect of democracy in Iraq, Amir Taheri gives an account of the often invisible progress. In his article in the June issue of Commentary Monthly Journal, Taheri gives an account of things that are going right in Iraq, including increases in agriculture and small business, a rising currency, and religious tolerance when compared to its neighbors Iran and Saudi Arabia. A stable, free, democracy so close to home is something the Saudi leadership sees as undermining its own authority. Amir Taheri's whole article expounds upon these points and can be found below.



Commentary Monthly Journal
The Real Iraq
Amir Taheri;
June 2006

Spending time in the United States after a tour of Iraq can be a disorienting experience these days. Within hours of arriving here, as I can attest from a recent visit, one is confronted with an image of Iraq that is unrecognizable. It is created in several overlapping ways: through television footage showing the charred remains of vehicles used in suicide attacks, surrounded by wailing women in black and grim-looking men carrying coffins; by armchair strategists and political gurus predicting further doom or pontificating about how the war should have been fought in the first place; by authors of instant-history books making their rounds to dissect the various “fundamental mistakes” committed by the Bush administration; and by reporters, cocooned in hotels in Baghdad, explaining the “carnage” and “chaos” in the streets as signs of the country’s “impending” or “undeclared” civil war. Add to all this the day’s alleged scandal or revelation—an outed CIA operative, a reportedly doctored intelligence report, a leaked pessimistic assessment—and it is no wonder the American public registers disillusion with Iraq and everyone who embroiled the U.S. in its troubles.

It would be hard indeed for the average interested citizen to find out on his own just how grossly this image distorts the realities of present-day Iraq. Part of the problem, faced by even the most well-meaning news organizations, is the difficulty of covering so large and complex a subject; naturally, in such circumstances, sensational items rise to the top. But even ostensibly more objective efforts, like the Brookings Institution’s much-cited Iraq Index with its constantly updated array of security, economic, and public-opinion indicators, tell us little about the actual feel of the country on the ground.

To make matters worse, many of the newsmen, pundits, and commentators on whom American viewers and readers rely to describe the situation have been contaminated by the increasing bitterness of American politics. Clearly there are those in the media and the think tanks who wish the Iraq enterprise to end in tragedy, as a just comeuppance for George W. Bush. Others, prompted by noble sentiment, so abhor the idea of war that they would banish it from human discourse before admitting that, in some circumstances, military power can be used in support of a good cause. But whatever the reason, the half-truths and outright misinformation that now function as conventional wisdom have gravely disserved the American people.

For someone like myself who has spent considerable time in Iraq—a country I first visited in 1968—current reality there is, nevertheless, very different from this conventional wisdom, and so are the prospects for Iraq’s future. It helps to know where to look, what sources to trust, and how to evaluate the present moment against the background of Iraqi and Middle Eastern history.

Since my first encounter with Iraq almost 40 years ago, I have relied on several broad measures of social and economic health to assess the country’s condition. Through good times and bad, these signs have proved remarkably accurate—as accurate, that is, as is possible in human affairs. For some time now, all have been pointing in an unequivocally positive direction.

The first sign is refugees. When things have been truly desperate in Iraq—in 1959, 1969, 1971, 1973, 1980, 1988, and 1990—long queues of Iraqis have formed at the Turkish and Iranian frontiers, hoping to escape. In 1973, for example, when Saddam Hussein decided to expel all those whose ancestors had not been Ottoman citizens before Iraq’s creation as a state, some 1.2 million Iraqis left their homes in the space of just six weeks. This was not the temporary exile of a small group of middle-class professionals and intellectuals, which is a common enough phenomenon in most Arab countries. Rather, it was a departure en masse, affecting people both in small villages and in big cities, and it was a scene regularly repeated under Saddam Hussein.

Since the toppling of Saddam in 2003, this is one highly damaging image we have not seen on our television sets—and we can be sure that we would be seeing it if it were there to be shown. To the contrary, Iraqis, far from fleeing, have been returning home. By the end of 2005, in the most conservative estimate, the number of returnees topped the 1.2-million mark. Many of the camps set up for fleeing Iraqis in Turkey, Iran, and Saudi Arabia since 1959 have now closed down. The oldest such center, at Ashrafiayh in southwest Iran, was formally shut when its last Iraqi guests returned home in 2004.

A second dependable sign likewise concerns human movement, but of a different kind. This is the flow of religious pilgrims to the Shiite shrines in Karbala and Najaf. Whenever things start to go badly in Iraq, this stream is reduced to a trickle and then it dries up completely. From 1991 (when Saddam Hussein massacred Shiites involved in a revolt against him) to 2003, there were scarcely any pilgrims to these cities. Since Saddam’s fall, they have been flooded with visitors. In 2005, the holy sites received an estimated 12 million pilgrims, making them the most visited spots in the entire Muslim world, ahead of both Mecca and Medina.

Over 3,000 Iraqi clerics have also returned from exile, and Shiite seminaries, which just a few years ago held no more than a few dozen pupils, now boast over 15,000 from 40 different countries. This is because Najaf, the oldest center of Shiite scholarship, is once again able to offer an alternative to Qom, the Iranian “holy city” where a radical and highly politicized version of Shiism is taught. Those wishing to pursue the study of more traditional and quietist forms of Shiism now go to Iraq where, unlike in Iran, the seminaries are not controlled by the government and its secret police.

A third sign, this one of the hard economic variety, is the value of the Iraqi dinar, especially as compared with the region’s other major currencies. In the final years of Saddam Hussein’s rule, the Iraqi dinar was in free fall; after 1995, it was no longer even traded in Iran and Kuwait. By contrast, the new dinar, introduced early in 2004, is doing well against both the Kuwaiti dinar and the Iranian rial, having risen by 17 percent against the former and by 23 percent against the latter. Although it is still impossible to fix its value against a basket of international currencies, the new Iraqi dinar has done well against the U.S. dollar, increasing in value by almost 18 percent between August 2004 and August 2005. The overwhelming majority of Iraqis, and millions of Iranians and Kuwaitis, now treat it as a safe and solid medium of exchange

My fourth time-tested sign is the level of activity by small and medium-sized businesses. In the past, whenever things have gone downhill in Iraq, large numbers of such enterprises have simply closed down, with the country’s most capable entrepreneurs decamping to Jordan, Syria, Saudi Arabia, the Persian Gulf states, Turkey, Iran, and even Europe and North America. Since liberation, however, Iraq has witnessed a private-sector boom, especially among small and medium-sized businesses.

According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, as well as numerous private studies, the Iraqi economy has been doing better than any other in the region. The country’s gross domestic product rose to almost $90 billion in 2004 (the latest year for which figures are available), more than double the output for 2003, and its real growth rate, as estimated by the IMF, was 52.3 per cent. In that same period, exports increased by more than $3 billion, while the inflation rate fell to 25.4 percent, down from 70 percent in 2002. The unemployment rate was halved, from 60 percent to 30 percent.

Related to this is the level of agricultural activity. Between 1991 and 2003, the country’s farm sector experienced unprecedented decline, in the end leaving almost the entire nation dependent on rations distributed by the United Nations under Oil-for-Food. In the past two years, by contrast, Iraqi agriculture has undergone an equally unprecedented revival. Iraq now exports foodstuffs to neighboring countries, something that has not happened since the 1950’s. Much of the upturn is due to smallholders who, shaking off the collectivist system imposed by the Baathists, have retaken control of land that was confiscated decades ago by the state.

Finally, one of the surest indices of the health of Iraqi society has always been its readiness to talk to the outside world. Iraqis are a verbalizing people; when they fall silent, life is incontrovertibly becoming hard for them. There have been times, indeed, when one could find scarcely a single Iraqi, whether in Iraq or abroad, prepared to express an opinion on anything remotely political. This is what Kanan Makiya meant when he described Saddam Hussein’s regime as a “republic of fear.”

Today, again by way of dramatic contrast, Iraqis are voluble to a fault. Talk radio, television talk-shows, and Internet blogs are all the rage, while heated debate is the order of the day in shops, tea-houses, bazaars, mosques, offices, and private homes. A “catharsis” is how Luay Abdulilah, the Iraqi short-story writer and diarist, describes it. “This is one way of taking revenge against decades of deadly silence.” Moreover, a vast network of independent media has emerged in Iraq, including over 100 privately-owned newspapers and magazines and more than two dozen radio and television stations. To anyone familiar with the state of the media in the Arab world, it is a truism that Iraq today is the place where freedom of expression is most effectively exercised.

That an experienced observer of Iraq with a sense of history can point to so many positive factors in the country’s present condition will not do much, of course, to sway the more determined critics of the U.S. intervention there. They might even agree that the images fed to the American public show only part of the picture, and that the news from Iraq is not uniformly bad. But the root of their opposition runs deeper, to political fundamentals.

Their critique can be summarized in the aphorism that “democracy cannot be imposed by force.” It is a view that can be found among the more sophisticated elements on the Left and, increasingly, among dissenters on the Right, from Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska to the ex-neoconservative Francis Fukuyama. As Senator Hagel puts it, “You cannot in my opinion just impose a democratic form of government on a country with no history and no culture and no tradition of democracy.”

I would tend to agree. But is Iraq such a place? In point of fact, before the 1958 pro-Soviet military coup d’etat that established a leftist dictatorship, Iraq did have its modest but nevertheless significant share of democratic history, culture, and tradition. The country came into being through a popular referendum held in 1921. A constitutional monarchy modeled on the United Kingdom, it had a bicameral parliament, several political parties (including the Baath and the Communists), and periodic elections that led to changes of policy and government. At the time, Iraq also enjoyed the freest press in the Arab world, plus the widest space for debate and dissent in the Muslim Middle East.

To be sure, Baghdad in those days was no Westminster, and, as the 1958 coup proved, Iraqi democracy was fragile. But every serious student of contemporary Iraq knows that substantial segments of the population, from all ethnic and religious communities, had more than a taste of the modern world’s democratic aspirations. As evidence, one need only consult the immense literary and artistic production of Iraqis both before and after the 1958 coup. Under successor dictatorial regimes, it is true, the conviction took hold that democratic principles had no future in Iraq—a conviction that was responsible in large part for driving almost five million Iraqis, a quarter of the population, into exile between 1958 and 2003, just as the opposite conviction is attracting so many of them and their children back to Iraq today.

A related argument used to condemn Iraq’s democratic prospects is that it is an “artificial” country, one that can be held together only by a dictator. But did any nation-state fall from the heavens wholly made? All are to some extent artificial creations, and the U.S. is preeminently so. The truth is that Iraq—one of the 53 founding countries of the United Nations—is older than a majority of that organization’s current 198 member states. Within the Arab League, and setting aside Oman and Yemen, none of the 22 members is older. Two-thirds of the 122 countries regarded as democracies by Freedom House came into being after Iraq’s appearance on the map.

Critics of the democratic project in Iraq also claim that, because it is a multi-ethnic and multi-confessional state, the country is doomed to despotism, civil war, or disintegration. But the same could be said of virtually all Middle Eastern states, most of which are neither multi-ethnic nor multi-confessional. More important, all Iraqis, regardless of their ethnic, linguistic, and sectarian differences, share a sense of national identity—uruqa (“Iraqi-ness”)—that has developed over the past eight decades. A unified, federal state may still come to grief in Iraq—history is not written in advance—but even should a divorce become inevitable at some point, a democratic Iraq would be in a better position to manage it.

What all of this demonstrates is that, contrary to received opinion, Operation Iraqi Freedom was not an attempt to impose democracy by force. Rather, it was an effort to use force to remove impediments to democratization, primarily by deposing a tyrant who had utterly suppressed a well-established aspect of the country’s identity. It may take years before we know for certain whether or not post-liberation Iraq has definitely chosen democracy. But one thing is certain: without the use of force to remove the Baathist regime, the people of Iraq would not have had the opportunity even to contemplate a democratic future.

“Assessing the progress of that democratic project is no simple matter. But, by any reasonable standard, Iraqis have made extraordinary strides. In a series of municipal polls and two general elections in the past three years, up to 70 percent of eligible Iraqis have voted. This new orientation is supported by more than 60 political parties and organizations, the first genuinely free-trade unions in the Arab world, a growing number of professional associations acting independently of the state, and more than 400 nongovernmental organizations representing diverse segments of civil society. A new constitution, written by Iraqis representing the full spectrum of political, ethnic, and religious sensibilities was overwhelmingly approved by the electorate in a referendum last October.

Iraq’s new democratic reality is also reflected in the vocabulary of politics used at every level of society. Many new words—accountability, transparency, pluralism, dissent—have entered political discourse in Iraq for the first time. More remarkably, perhaps, all parties and personalities currently engaged in the democratic process have committed themselves to the principle that power should be sought, won, and lost only through free and fair elections. These democratic achievements are especially impressive when set side by side with the declared aims of the enemies of the new Iraq, who have put up a determined fight against it. Since the country’s liberation, the jihadists and residual Baathists have killed an estimated 23,000 Iraqis, mostly civilians, in scores of random attacks and suicide operations. Indirectly, they have caused the death of thousands more, by sabotaging water and electricity services and by provoking sectarian revenge attacks.

But they have failed to translate their talent for mayhem and murder into political success. Their campaign has not succeeded in appreciably slowing down, let alone stopping, the country’s democratization. Indeed, at each step along the way, the jihadists and Baathists have seen their self-declared objectives thwarted.

After the invasion, they tried at first to prevent the formation of a Governing Council, the expression of Iraq’s continued existence as a sovereign nation-state. They managed to murder several members of the council, including its president in 2003, but failed to prevent its formation or to keep it from performing its task in the interim period. The next aim of the insurgents was to stop municipal elections. Their message was simple: candidates and voters would be killed. But, once again, they failed: thousands of men and women came forward as candidates and more than 1.5 million Iraqis voted in the localities where elections were held.

The insurgency made similar threats in the lead-up to the first general election, and the result was the same. Despite killing 36 candidates and 148 voters, they failed to derail the balloting, in which the number of voters rose to more than 8 million. Nor could the insurgency prevent the writing of the new democratic constitution, despite a campaign of assassination against its drafters. The text was ready in time and was submitted to and approved by a referendum, exactly as planned. The number of voters rose yet again, to more than 9 million.

What of relations among the Shiites, Sunnis, and Kurds—the focus of so much attention of late? For almost three years, the insurgency worked hard to keep the Arab Sunni community, which accounts for some 15 percent of the population, out of the political process. But that campaign collapsed when millions of Sunnis turned out to vote in the constitutional referendum and in the second general election, which saw almost 11 million Iraqis go to the polls. As I write, all political parties representing the Arab Sunni minority have joined the political process and have strong representation in the new parliament. With the convening of that parliament, and the nomination in April of a new prime minister and a three-man presidential council, the way is open for the formation of a broad-based government of national unity to lead Iraq over the next four years.

As for the insurgency’s effort to foment sectarian violence—a strategy first launched in earnest toward the end of 2005—this too has run aground. The hope here was to provoke a full-scale war between the Arab Sunni minority and the Arab Shiites who account for some 60 percent of the population. The new strategy, like the ones previously tried, has certainly produced many deaths. But despite countless cases of sectarian killings by so-called militias, there is still no sign that the Shiites as a whole will acquiesce in the role assigned them by the insurgency and organize a concerted campaign of nationwide retaliation.

Finally, despite the impression created by relentlessly dire reporting in the West, the insurgency has proved unable to shut down essential government services. Hundreds of teachers and schoolchildren have been killed in incidents including the beheading of two teachers in their classrooms this April and horrific suicide attacks against school buses. But by September 2004, most schools across Iraq and virtually all universities were open and functioning. By September 2005, more than 8.5 million Iraqi children and young people were attending school or university—an all-time record in the nation’s history.

A similar story applies to Iraq’s clinics and hospitals. Between October 2003 and January 2006, more than 80 medical doctors and over 400 nurses and medical auxiliaries were murdered by the insurgents. The jihadists also raided several hospitals, killing ordinary patients in their beds. But, once again, they failed in their objectives. By January 2006, all of Iraq’s 600 state-owned hospitals and clinics were in full operation, along with dozens of new ones set up by the private sector since liberation.

Another of the insurgency’s strategic goals was to bring the Iraqi oil industry to a halt and to disrupt the export of crude. Since July 2003, Iraq’s oil infrastructure has been the target of more than 3,000 attacks and attempts at sabotage. But once more the insurgency has failed to achieve its goals. Iraq has resumed its membership in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and has returned to world markets as a major oil exporter. According to projections, by the end of 2006 it will be producing its full OPEC quota of 2.8 million barrels a day.

The Baathist remnant and its jihadist allies resemble a gambler who wins a heap of chips at a roulette table only to discover that he cannot exchange them for real money at the front desk. The enemies of the new Iraq have succeeded in ruining the lives of tens of thousands of Iraqis, but over the past three years they have advanced their overarching goals, such as they are, very little. Instead, they have been militarily contained and politically defeated again and again, and the beneficiary has been Iraqi democracy.

None of this means that the new Iraq is out of the woods. Far from it. Democratic success still requires a great deal of patience, determination, and luck. The U.S.-led coalition, its allies, and partners have achieved most of their major political objectives, but that achievement remains under threat and could be endangered if the U.S., for whatever reason, should decide to snatch a defeat from the jaws of victory.

The current mandate of the U.S.-led coalition runs out at the end of this year, and it is unlikely that Washington and its allies will want to maintain their military presence at current levels. In the past few months, more than half of the 103 bases used by the coalition have been transferred to the new Iraqi army. The best guess is that the number of U.S. and coalition troops could be cut from 140,000 to 25,000 or 30,000 by the end of 2007.

One might wonder why, if the military mission has been so successful, the U.S. still needs to maintain a military presence in Iraq for at least another two years. There are three reasons for this.

The first is to discourage Iraq’s predatory neighbors, notably Iran and Syria, which might wish to pursue their own agendas against the new government in Baghdad. Iran has already revived some claims under the Treaties of Erzerum (1846), according to which Tehran would enjoy a droit de regard over Shiite shrines in Iraq. In Syria, some in that country’s ruling circles have invoked the possibility of annexing the area known as Jazirah, the so-called Sunni triangle, in the name of Arab unity. For its part, Turkey is making noises about the Treaty of Lausanne (1923), which gave it a claim to the oilfields of northern Iraq. All of these pretensions need to be rebuffed.

The second reason for extending America’s military presence is political. The U.S. is acting as an arbiter among Iraq’s various ethnic and religious communities and political factions. It is, in a sense, a traffic cop, giving Iraqis a green or red light when and if needed. It is important that the U.S. continue performing this role for the first year or two of the newly elected parliament and government.

Finally, the U.S. and its allies have a key role to play in training and testing Iraq’s new army and police. Impressive success has already been achieved in that field. Nevertheless, the new Iraqi army needs at least another year or two before it will have developed adequate logistical capacities and learned to organize and conduct operations involving its various branches.

But will the U.S. stay the course? Many are betting against it. The Baathists and jihadists, their prior efforts to derail Iraqi democracy having come to naught, have now pinned their hopes on creating enough chaos and death to persuade Washington of the futility of its endeavors. In this, they have the tacit support not only of local Arab and Muslim despots rightly fearful of the democratic genie but of all those in the West whose own incessant theme has been the certainty of American failure. Among Bush-haters in the U.S., just as among anti-Americans around the world, predictions of civil war in Iraq, of spreading regional hostilities, and of a revived global terrorism are not about to cease any time soon.

But more sober observers should understand the real balance sheet in Iraq. Democracy is succeeding. Moreover, thanks to its success in Iraq, there are stirrings elsewhere in the region. Beyond the much-publicized electoral concessions wrung from authoritarian rulers in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, there is a new democratic discourse to be heard. Nationalism and pan-Arabism, yesterday’s hollow rallying cries, have given way to a “big idea” of a very different kind. Debate and dissent are in the air where there was none before—a development owing, in significant measure, to the U.S. campaign in Iraq and the brilliant if still checkered Iraqi response.

The stakes, in short, could not be higher. This is all the more reason to celebrate, to build on, and to consolidate what has already been accomplished. Instead of railing against the Bush administration, America’s elites would do better, and incidentally display greater self-respect, to direct their wrath where it properly belongs: at those violent and unrestrained enemies of democracy in Iraq who are, in truth, the enemies of democracy in America as well, and of everything America has ever stood for.

Is Iraq a quagmire, a disaster, a failure? Certainly not; none of the above. Of all the adjectives used by skeptics and critics to describe today’s Iraq, the only one that has a ring of truth is “messy.” Yes, the situation in Iraq today is messy. Births always are. Since when is that a reason to declare a baby unworthy of life?

Amir Taheri, formerly the executive editor of Kayhan, Iran’s largest daily newspaper, is the author of ten books and a frequent contributor to numerous publications in the Middle East and Europe. His work appears regularly in the New York Post.