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HARDLY WESTMINSTER STANDARDS, BUT
STILL VERY RELEVANT
by Saad Eddin
Ibrahim
The Daily Star
January 18, 2005
This month's elections in Iraq and for the
presidency of the Palestinian Authority may be claiming all the
world's headlines, but another potentially far-reaching ballot is also
under way, albeit to far less acclaim: the registration process has
started for the municipal elections in Saudi Arabia in mid-February.
As the heartland of some of the strongest Islamist forces anywhere,
this Saudi effort - if successful and a harbinger of other needed
changes - may have an even more profound impact than the elections in
Iraq and Palestine. Roughly 40,000 Saudis are expected to compete for
1,700 seats in 178 municipal councils. The enthusiasm is obvious, and
the campaign is already under way and highly spirited. Members of the
Saudi royal family are not entering the race, as they already enjoy
ultimate political power. But, sensing the public's excitement, they
have made sure to be photographed by local and international media
while registering to get their electoral identification cards. By the
standards of Western and even emerging Third World democracies, the
Saudi municipal elections are an extremely modest affair. But in the
Saudi context they do represent a real breakthrough. For Saudi Arabia
is a country in which both rulers and ruled are equally
archconservative, adhering for the last two centuries to the
puritanical Wahhabi doctrine of Islam. During the last 50 years,
repeated attempts by reform-oriented elements to open up Saudi
Arabia's society and polity failed. But recent democratic trends
worldwide have now reached the shores of this medieval desert kingdom
and can no longer be ignored.
To begin with, members of the small but steadily
growing Saudi middle class have increasingly expressed their
discontent publicly. Despite legal prohibition, Saudi women have
defiantly driven their cars in the streets of Riyadh, while prominent
intellectuals have published open letters to King Fahd and Crown
Prince Abdullah demanding social and political reform.
This pressure for change has been building for
years. The first Gulf war of 1990-1991 brought nearly one million
foreign fighters from 35 countries to the Arabian Peninsula, along
with their modern weapons systems, communications gear and different
lifestyles. Such a massive foreign influx into so hermetic a country
could not but have had a significant domestic impact.
Nearly all countries neighboring Saudi Arabia
already practice one form of electoral participation or another,
although most of these nods toward democracy are defective in some
way. For years, ordinary Saudis watched with envy parliamentary
debates on Arab satellite channels in countries richer than theirs,
such as Kuwait, as well as in poorer ones, such as Yemen and Jordan.
Even the tiny state of Qatar has the rabble-rouser Al-Jazeera
television channel, which is watched by more viewers in Saudi Arabia
than in any other Arab country. Messages by their dissident compatriot
Osama bin Laden are periodically beamed from that channel, inciting
Saudis against the royal family. Bin Laden constantly highlights the
House of Saud's corruption and repugnant connections with the United
States. While democracy is not part of his agenda, his messages, as
well as his followers' periodic armed attacks inside the country, have
no doubt contributed to the erosion of the regime's legitimacy. But it
was the terrorist attacks against the United States on Sept. 11, 2001,
that brought a sea change in the thinking, if not yet the practice, of
at least part of the Saudi regime. The fact that most of the
perpetrators of the attacks were identified as Saudis highlighted the
country's backward realities, provoking mounting international
pressures for change. No doubt some of these pressures were motivated
by sincere concerns, but others were driven by the desire of
anti-Saudi groups in the U.S. to settle old scores. The call for
democratizing the Middle East has become a battle cry for the Bush
administration, especially after the invasion and occupation of Iraq.
Despite its reluctance to change, the Saudi royal family is obviously
yielding to these multiple pressures from within, from neighbors, and
from the wider world, although the extent of change is still nominal
and obviously leaves much to be desired. Thus, for example, Saudi
women, but not convicts, are barred from participating in the
forthcoming municipal elections. Moreover, tens of human rights
activists are currently in prison or on trial. To be sure, the Saudi
system is still worlds away from being a Westminster-style democracy;
indeed, it will probably never become one. All the same, this
municipal election should be looked upon as a giant first step in the
arduous journey toward Saudi democracy. Despite many misgivings
regarding its conduct in other areas, the Saudi regime should be
commended for this initiative.
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