Saturday, February 26, 2011

Saudi king accused of misjudged bribery in attempt to avoid unrest...


Leading intellectuals in Saudi Arabia have warned that grand financial gestures are no substitute for meaningful political reform, after King Abdullah unveiled a $36bn (£22bn) social welfare package in advance of planned anti-government protests next month.

In a statement released on Thursday, a group of Saudi scholars called on the royal family to learn from recent uprisings in the Gulf and North Africa and to start listening to the voices of the kingdom's disenfranchised young people, some of whom are planning a "day of rage" on 11 March. Several Islamic thinkers, as well as a female academic and a poet, are among those adding their names to the declaration.

"The Saudi regime is learning all the wrong lessons from Egypt and Tunisia," said Shadi Hamid, director of research at the Brookings Doha Centre. "The unrest in the region is not fundamentally economic, it's fundamentally about politics. Economics plays a role but what the events of the past few months have shown us is that Arabs are looking for freedom, dignity and democracy – and if the Saudi leadership can't see that, then they're in trouble." More...

Don't miss:
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  2. Sexual prey in the Saudi jungle...
  3. Saudi princes throw parties boasting drink, drugs and sex...
  4. Nine Saudi men and women rebuked for sitting together at café...
  5. Saudi Arabia's betrayal to the Islamic world...
  6. Amnesty criticises Saudi Arabia's 'shocking' human rights violations...
  7. Saudi women and abusive fathers... 

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