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An Unsavory
Ally
Eric
Stakelbeck
“The Saudis are friends. We have been friends with the
Saudis for many years, and we want to remain friends
with the Saudis.”
With this statement, made during a January 21 appearance
on WPHT Radio in Philadelphia, Secretary of State Colin
Powell suggested that the Saudi Royal Family’s “special
relationship” with the United States—tenuous since
9/11—would continue unabated. Indeed, just one day after
Powell’s remarks,
the Saudi government, in a joint action with the U.S.
Department of Treasury, asked the United Nations to
freeze the assets of four branches of the Al-Haramain
Foundation, a Saudi-created charity that has provided
support to Al-Qaeda and other terrorist organizations
and is linked to the 1998
Africa
embassy bombings.
This joint announcement was significant in that it was
the House of Saud’s first real public acknowledgement of
the role played by Saudi charities in financing
worldwide Islamic terrorism. However, despite the
victorious smiles and handshakes shared by U.S. and
Saudi officials at the Al-Haramain press conference,
there was an elephant in the room—namely, the Kingdom’s
continued endorsement of a militant Wahhabi ideology
that represents the antithesis of American ideals and
values.
About the same time Colin Powell was declaring the need
for a strong U.S. “partnership” with the Saudis on WPHT,
the Kingdom’s highest religious authority, Grand Mufti
Sheikh Abdul-Aziz al-Sheikh, was warning of “grave
consequences” for a group of Saudi women who had
appeared unveiled at a recent economic forum in the
Saudi city of Jeddah. Abdul-Aziz’s ire was drawn in
particular by Lubna al-Olayan, Saudi Arabia’s leading
businesswoman, who discarded the headscarf traditionally
worn by Saudi women during her speech at the Jeddah
event and called for the House of Saud to “embrace
change.” Al-Olayan’s sentiments were shared by other
Saudi female delegates, who, while separated from the
males at the forum by a large screen, were able to cross
into the men’s section and mingle. The women’s actions
provoked a firestorm in the Saudi media, with newspapers
featuring pictures of the unveiled women alongside
approving editorials. Saudi religious authorities,
however, had a different view.
“I decree that Muslims should beware, be alert and avoid
being carried away by this propaganda, which destroys
religion, morals and virtues,” said Sheikh Abdul-Aziz,
the Kingdom’s foremost authority on Wahhabist
principles. “What was published in some newspapers about
this being the start of liberating the Saudi woman—such
talk is null and void. One's duty is to obey Shariah
(Islamic law) by complying with orders and shunning that
which is forbidden.”
Sheikh Abdul-Aziz’s word is considered gospel by a large
percentage of Saudis, including members of the Royal
Family. To many, when Abdul-Aziz says that, “Allowing
women to mix with men is the root of every evil and
catastrophe,” and calls Al-Olayan’s unveiling “highly
punishable,” it is the equivalent of a religious edict.
This does not bode well for women like al-Olayan, who
wish to attain basic human privileges like the right to
drive a car, work where they please and travel freely
without a male escort, privileges denied—often times
brutally—in Saudi Arabia.
The State Department’s 2002 Report on Human Rights
Practices describes in detail the “violence and abuse”
and “discrimination under Shari'a” faced by women in the
Royal Kingdom.
One of the more disturbing and widely publicized
examples of such repression occurred in March 2002, when
15 girls died in a fire at an intermediate school in
Mecca.
According to eyewitnesses, members of the
government-funded Saudi Committee for the Promotion of
Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (Mutawwa’in, in
Arabic) interfered with civil defense officers’ efforts
to rescue female students who were not wearing the long
black cloaks and veils required of Saudi females.
Incredibly, many of the girls were reportedly ordered
back inside the burning building by the Mutawwa’in. The
controversy which ensued sparked discussion about the
powerful role of the Mutawwa’in in the day-to-day lives
of Saudi citizens. Nevertheless, the organization
continues to maintain significant influence over Saudi
women, strictly enforcing dress codes, sex segregation
and “virtuous” behavior.
Interestingly enough,
Saudi Arabia has
served on the United Nations Commission on Human Rights
and is a state party to the U.N. Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women. The Saudi government has long spoken of reforming
its policies towards women, with little or no results to
show for its rhetoric. However, in spite of its numerous
human rights abuses, the House of Saud is undoubtedly
more attractive to the
U.S.
than its alternative—a Taliban-like theocracy comprised
of the Kingdom’s dissident militant elements. The status
quo, therefore, continues.
“We have talked to the Saudis about how the 21st century
is going to require changes in their society,” Colin
Powell told WPHT last week.
The women of Saudi Arabia can only hope.
Erick Stakelbeck is
head writer at the Investigative Project, a Washington,
DC-based counterterrorism research institute.
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