Sunday, March 06, 2011

Reforming Saudi Arabia

CROSSROADS ARABIA: Arab News runs an open letter to the King, by a Saudi lawyer, Khalid Alnowaiser. In the letter, Alnowaiser spells out the changes he thinks critical for Saudi Arabia to meet the challenges the country is now facing and will continue to face until political, social, and economic reforms are made.

For a person who’s been following Saudi Arabia’s halting march toward modernization, there’s not much new in his letter. He points out the flaws, like a dysfunctional legal system; an economy that relies on one commodity; violations of human rights and the limited rights of women; a failed education system. He calls on the King to start instituting the changes necessary. All good.

What’s disquieting, to say the least, is the pushback in the comments to his letter. There are those who somehow see the letter as a call to abandon Islam and Shariah law; others wrap their arms protectively around the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, seeing it as a necessity for good governance. No one actually calls Alnowaiser a kufar, but some suggest that his program of reform will inevitably lead the Saudi nation down the road to perdition. Continue reading and comment >>> | Sunday, March 06, 2011