Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, March
1999, pages 38-41
Issues in the News
Compiled by Delinda C. Hanley
ARABIAN PENINSULA
Saudi Arabia Celebrates Centennial:
This year Saudi Arabia is celebrating the 100-year
anniversary of the lunar calendar date on which Abdel Aziz Ibn Saud
recaptured Riyadh, from which his family had been driven, and then
went on to become the first king of a unified Saudi Arabia. Academic
conferences, cultural festivals, books, songs and films throughout
the year will mark the occasion.
Saudi Arabias Centennial Challenges:
The collapse of oil prices caused Saudi revenues to
fall by a third last year, and this years planned state spending
was cut by almost 16 percent. According to The Gulf News of
Dubai, for every dollar drop in the price of petroleum, the country
loses $2.5 billion in budget revenues. In 1997 the price per barrel
was more than $18, while today it is just over $10 per barrel. As
a result, the total value of export revenues shrank by almost 30
percent (or $13 billion) to $31 billion for 1998, and defense spending
has been reduced by $1.9 billion. Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah told
the Arabian Gulf Cooperation Council summit in Abu Dhabi in December,
The boom period is over and will never return. He added
that Saudis must get used to a new way of life that is not
based on total dependence on the state. One vital challenge
for the next century, according to a Jan. 23 article in The Economist,
must be to accelerate training of the kingdoms young men and
women75 percent of the population is under 30to replace
at least some of the five million foreign workers in Saudi Arabia.
Give Little Arab Girls Leila Dolls:
There are 60 million Arab little girls out there
who share the same language, culture and history, the head
of the Arab Leagues childrens department, Abla Ibrahim,
said in a recent interview with the Arab News of Jeddah.
These girls are playing with blonde Barbie dolls or the chadored
Sarah dolls from Iran. We must make dolls that have dark
skin, eyes and hair and non-religious Arab names like Leila or Amira,
she said, deploring the lack of Arab-made toys for children in the
region. Ibrahims dream doll would have modern dresses and
national costumes representing the 22 different countries of the
Arab League. She noted that Egypt, with a population of 65 million,
imports 95 percent of its toys because it only has five toy factories.
Israel has 30 toy factories.
Desert Fox Interrupts Ferry Service:
U.S. military strikes on Iraq have halted weekly ferry
service between Dubai and the southern Iraqi port of Umm Qasr. The
Khaleej Times of Dubai noted that the 36-hour sea trips were
first launched with U.N. approval Nov. 7. The ferry provides the
only direct transportation alternative to a 1,000-kilometer road
trip via Jordan.
UAE Begins Two-Day Weekends:
Since Jan. 1, students, teachers and federal employees
in the UAE have been enjoying two-day weekends. Employees will be
able to spend Thursdays and Fridays with their families, and return
to work more relaxed after a long weekend, said a government
announcement, and their productivity will increase.
This should also please employees who live in one emirate and work
in another. Working hours were extended by an hour each day to create
the longer weekend, and now UAE government offices will be open
from 7:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Bahrain TV News Reader Weeps:
A Bahraini television reporter broke into tears as
he read reports of the devastation caused by U.S. and British airstrikes
on Iraq, the Saudi Gazette of Jeddah reported on Dec. 21.
News reader Abdel Jalil Al-Tafifs colleagues had to take
his place when he broke down while watching film from Iraq. Scores
of viewers called Bahrains TV station to express solidarity
with Tarif and urge an Arab and Islamic initiative to stop
the aggression.
Kuwaits Economy Faces Slowdown:
Kuwaiti ruler Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah called
on his people to tighten their belts Jan. 11 as oil prices plunged.
The emir warned, Those who do not wake up in time will be
swept away by the torrent. With oil accounting for over 90
percent of total exports and more than 80 percent of the national
budget, Finance Minister Ali Al-Salem Al-Sabah told Kuwaits
parliament the government is facing a $6 billion deficit for the
current fiscal year. Reform plans include raising the prices of
water, electricity, fuel, and customs duties, and of medical services
for non-nationals. Kuwaiti citizens, who comprise only one-third
of Kuwaits population, pay no income tax, receive free medical
care, education, and guaranteed employment, and enjoy highly subsidized
housing, utilities and fuel.
Omans Social Insurance Project Covers 63,000
Workers:
Omans Public Authority for Social Insurance
(PASI) reports the number of private-sector workers covered by Omans
social insurance project launched in 1992 has reached 63,000. The
program ensures a monthly income for a worker and his or her family
in the event of disability, death, injury or sickness, an article
in the Khaleej Times notes. A total of 3,663 businesses were
registered by August 1998 to provide this social insurance
umbrella. PASI invests some of its proceeds in investment
and commercial banks.
Camel Antibodies Cure Blindness:
Researchers hope to clone camel antibodies to cure
river blindness, a disease that affects 35 million people in the
world. This disease is the second most common source of infectious
blindness and is caused by a parasitic worm that is transmitted
by flies. Researchers examining the camels immune system told
the Oman Daily Observer they had isolated antibodies in camels
that protect them from this disease. They hope to clone the camels
antibodies to protect humans.
Qatar Plans Elected Parliament:
Qatars emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani,
has announced a plan for an elected parliament, the Oman Observer
reports. We have decided to form a committee of competent
and efficient people to draw a permanent constitution for the country,
Sheikh Hamad said, with one of its basic provisions to be
the formation of a parliament elected directly by the public.
All male and female Qatari citizens who are 18 years of age and
older may vote in the countrys first municipal elections being
held in February 1999.
Tourists Killed in Yemen:
Yemeni authorities learned of an anti-British plot
after detaining two extremists Dec. 23, but no one informed British
diplomats, according to the Arab News of Jeddah. Instead,
a Yemeni group called Islamic Jihad kidnapped 16 tourists Dec. 28,
offering to exchange them for the release of the groups leader,
Saleh Haydara Atwani. Yemeni security forces launched a rescue Dec.
29 that ended in tragedy as kidnappers used hostages as human shields,
resulting in the death of three Britons and one Australian and the
wounding of two other tourists. In the past five years, heavily
armed Yemeni tribesmen have kidnapped 150 foreigners, but no one
previously had been killed.
FERTILE CRESCENT
King Hussein Suffers Relapse:
On Jan. 26, only a week after his triumphant return
to Amman following six months of cancer treatment, Jordans
King Hussein, accompanied by Queen Noor, returned to the United
States for further hospitalization. During his week in Amman, the
63-year-old monarch announced the appointment of his son Abdullah,
a 36-year-old army major general, to be crown prince, replacing
the kings brother, Prince Hassan ibn Talal, who had held the
post for 34 years. Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, Qatars
emir Sheikh Hamad ibn Khalifah Al-Thani, and Yemeni President Ali
Abdallah Salah were among the many dignitaries greeting the king
upon his brief return to Amman.
Mother and Six Children Killed in Israeli Air Raid
in Lebanon:
A 35-year-old Lebanese mother, Nadwa Othman, and her
six children, aged between 18 months and 18 years, were killed Dec.
22 by Israeli warplanes in their home near Baalbeck on Lebanons
eastern border with Syria. The family was preparing to break the
Ramadan fast as the father, a member of no political group, returned
from the fields, narrowly missing the attack himself. The Israeli
air force raided southern Lebanon more than 100 times in 1998, killing
28 civilians and 37 Hezbollah guerrilla fighters. Twenty Israeli
soldiers were killed in south Lebanon in 1998. Israeli peace activists,
led by the Four Mothers Movement, have demanded a unilateral
pullout from south Lebanon. U.N. Security Council Resolution 425,
passed 20 years ago, called for Israels immediate withdrawal
from Lebanon.
Lebanon Warns Against Air Attacks:
Lebanons Hezbollah warned Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu against attacking Lebanon to boost his popularity before
Israels May 17 elections, the Jerusalem Post reported
Jan. 11. Israeli cabinet ministers had called for military strikes
against Beiruts water and power supplies as low-level flights
breaking the sound barrier over Beirut triggered panic in December.
Noting the country has been the graveyard of many an
Israeli government, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Hezbollah,
the Shii Muslim group trying to oust Israel from Lebanese
territory it has occupied since 1978, told Reuters in Beirut: The
lives of people of the south should not become votes to stuff the
ballot boxes. In April 1996, just before the last Israeli
general election, the Israeli government of Shimon Peres launched
the 17-day Grapes of Wrath offensive in Lebanon, killing 200 civilians
and destroying infrastructure rebuilt after Lebanons civil
war. Israels Haaretz newspaper reported Jan.
10 that even Washington fears Netanyahu may attack to revive his
popularity.
Israeli Bulldozers Demolish 14 Lebanese Homes:
The Israeli army demolished 14 homes Jan. 7 in southern
Lebanon, two and a half miles outside its self-declared Israeli
security zone. It was the second demolition action in
two weeks. Israeli soldiers based at Beaufort Castle spent four
hours leveling homes in the village of Arnoun with a bulldozer,
according to the Saudi Gazette. A military spokesman in Jerusalem
confirmed a total of 19 house demolitions, saying the homes were
used to attack Israeli troops and their South Lebanon Army allies.
Twenty-four family members in the Sunni Muslim village
of Shebaa, in the Israeli-occupied zone of Lebanon, were expelled
Jan 7, Agence France-Presse reported. More than 100 of Shebaas
youth had been sent to SLA headquarters for interrogation in the
two weeks prior to the deportation. Before Israels occupation,
the village had 40,000 residents, compared to only 3,000 who remain
now.
Syria Votes for New Parliament:
Syrian voters chose a new parliament, or Peoples
Assembly, in Nov. 30 elections dominated by President Hafez Assads
National Progressive Front (NPF). Voter turnout was high in this
country of 17 million people, of whom 8.5 million are of voting
age. Members of the armed forces and police do not vote. Voters
selected 250 members from a sea of close to 7,400 candidates, including
815 women. Arab News also reports Syrian President Assad,
69, has been chosen by his party for another seven-year term, starting
in March. He first took power in 1970, and became president in March
1971. The Peoples Assembly will discuss the nomination, in
accordance with Syrias constitution.
U.S. Embassy Restores Service:
Consular services were suspended when the U.S. Embassy
in Syria was damaged on Dec. 19 by a mob protesting the bombing
of Iraq. The embassy resumed issuing immigrant visas Jan. 5, but
visa services for visitors, students and business travelers have
not yet been restored. Some demonstrators forced their way into
Ambassador Ryan Crockers nearby residence, causing extensive
damage.
IRAN/IRAQ
Military Training for Iranian Teens:
Iranian teenagers between the ages of 13 and 18 will
be required to take military training courses, according to reports
in the Iranian daily Abrar.
Iranian Intelligence Officers Arrested:
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has authorized the arrest of
25 low-ranking Intelligence Ministry personnel for the recent murders
of dissident intellectuals. Two other Intelligence Ministry agents
have been implicated but have not been arrested. According to a
government source, irresponsible, misguided and unruly personnel
were responsible for the murders of the regimes critics. I
cannot believe that these murders have happened without a foreign
scenario, Khamenei insisted. These murders aimed to
damage the system and the government, he concluded.
Iraq and Iran Discuss Air Strikes:
Iraq sent a delegation to Iran to discuss recent
joint U.S.-British air strikes and the no-fly zones
imposed on two-thirds of Iraq without U.N. approval. One U.S. missile
strayed into Iranian territory, hitting the Iranian port city of
Khorramshahr, close to the Iran-Iraq border. Iraqi delegation leader
Ajeel Jalal Ismael told the Iraqi News Agency Jan. 3 that Iran has
agreed to release another 1,000 Iraqi prisoners of war held since
the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war.
UNICEF and UNESCO Deplore Bomb Attacks:
United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF) officials
reported bomb damage in Iraq to five schools, 12 hospitals, a granary,
a huge rice storage center, the principal oil-refining factory used
for domestic consumption, and various water supply networks. The
Iraqi government announced that thousands of civilians were killed
and the Pentagon estimated that 2,000 Iraqi soldiers were killed.
On the other hand, Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz said only
62 military personnel had been killed and 180 wounded. UNESCO Director
General Federico Mayor called for the international community to
aid Iraq, suggesting that a school should be built for every missile
fired. If were capable of sending 425 missiles, lets
now build 425 schools. Replace war with education, bombs with books,
and missiles with school teachers, he said in a Spanish radio
interview. Each cruise missile costs $750,000. Jean Marie Benjamin,
a priest from a Christian foundation that collaborates with UNICEF,
said he saw burned children and children being operated on without
anesthesia. He said the so-called smart bombs have destroyed
houses and civilian facilities and killed hundreds of victims.
Iraq Executes Political Prisoners:
Iraq executed 81 political prisoners, including army
officers who were accused of plotting to kill Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussain, the Center for Human Rights, an Iraqi opposition group,
announced Jan. 8. The center said the executions took place in mid-December
in a prison near Baghdad. When the bodies of 15 of the victims were
returned, their families were warned not to conduct any public funerals.
ISRAEL/PALESTINE
Israel Deports Doomsday Cult:
Fourteen members of a Denver-based doomsday cult were
deported from Israel in January, the Washington Jewish Week
reports, because the cultists were planning vio lent actions disguised
as the work of Islamic fundamentalists in order to try to bring
about the second coming of Jesus. Israels recent TV coverage
of the cult may have been the cause of subsequent threats and violence
by Jewish extremists against other Christian organizations in Jerusalem.
Vandals have broken stained glass windows in Jerusalems St.
Andrews Church of Scotland, the Jerusalem Post reports.
Posters showing a Swiss Catholic woman who was recently shot through
the head and whose apartment was burned down in November were plastered
outside churches and bookstores.
Jews to Hunt For Lost Assets in Seven Arab Lands:
Flushed with recent success in recovering Jewish property
lost in the Holocaust in Europe, Israels Knesset is launching
a similar hunt for Jewish assets in the Arab world. A national center
will collect documents and testimony about property left behind
by Jews who emigrated to Israel after they fled Egypt, Iraq, Libya,
Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and Yemen.
Israeli Police Ban Reporting on Jewish Bomber in
Jerusalem:
Israel Army Radio reported a Jewish man was injured
while planting a bomb near the gates of Jerusalems Old City.
The bomb went off prematurely and the man, when questioned, told
police he was only moving a suspicious object. Police are investigating
if the case of the Jewish bomber is related to the Jeru salem serial
stabber who has recently attacked and killed Arab men. Police have
announced a gag order on the case. Since March 1994, Jewish extremists,
many of whom go unpunished by Israeli authorities, have killed 56
Palestinians.
Women Victims of Domestic Violence:
One in seven Israeli women is a victim of domestic
violence. Statistics released to the Jerusalem Post state
that every month one woman is murdered by her partner. In mid-December
two foreign women were severely beaten by the former boyfriend of
one of the victims. Police took the three into custody, quickly
releasing the attacker, who was Israeli. The two women were detained
for hours with no medical treatment and they still languish in the
Neveh Tirzah detention center weeks later because authorities say
they are illegally in Israel.
Netanyahu Prevents Rebuilding of Two Christian Arab
Villages:
In 1948 the Israeli army swept into two Christian
Arab villages, Ikrit and Biram, close to the Lebanese border, without
resistance. Villagers were ordered to leave and their homes were
demolished. Now residents have asked Israels Supreme Court
to allow them to return and rebuild their villages, which are situated
inside Israels Green Line borders. The courts have ruled in
favor of the residents, but Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
opposes the ruling and has prevented their return because he says
it would set a dangerous precedent. A first-hand account of the
Israeli seizure of Biram is contained in the book Blood Brothers
by Father Elias Chacour, a Palestinian Catholic priest who as a
child was expelled from his village with his family.
Final Palestinian Census Results:
The final results of a two-year Palestinian census
are in. Almost 1.9 million people live in the West Bank and 1.02
million in the Gaza Strip. Palestinians living in Israeli-annexed
East Jerusalem number 210,209 and there are 113,628 people in the
villages and suburbs surrounding East Jerusalem, which Palestinians
consider Jerusalem districts. Israel says its population is six
million, including Arab residents of East Jerusalem and some one
million Palestinian Arabs living within Israels Green Line
border. One Palestinian in five lives on less than U.S. $2 a day.
More than half a million live below the poverty line in the territories
currently under Palestinian Authority administration, with unemployment
at 30 percent. Only 57,000 Palestinians are allowed to work in Israel
and the occupied territories.
Gazan Girl Recalls Clintons Promise:
When U.S. President Clinton and President Yasser Arafat
met four young daughters of Palestinian prisoners held in Israel
on Dec. 12, both leaders were moved to tears. Clinton wiped his
eyes and then gave his handkerchief to nine-year-old Nihad Zaqqout,
who cried as she begged Clinton to help her father come home in
time for the Ramadan holidays. Nihad says she is deeply sad that
Clinton broke his promise to do whatever he could to release her
father. I was not able to hug my father on the morning of
the Eid like all the children of the world, she said. Over
2,500 Palestinians are imprisoned in Israel.
Israeli Bulldozers Demolish Palestinian Homes and
Orchards:
The Israeli army destroyed 147 Palestinian homes in
1998, the U.S.-based Solidarity International group announced in
January. Last year was a bad year for demolitions and next
year is going to be worse, Ahmed Abu Shalal told Agence France-Press.
Nearly 700 homes have been destroyed since the 1993 Oslo accords
were signed, and some 2,000 more homes have been targeted for demolition.
On Jan. 12 Israeli troops bulldozed an orchard of 90 olive, almond
and fig trees near the village of Aboud, across from the Jewish
settlement of Beit Ariye. When owner Hanna Saba asked why they were
uprooting his trees, a soldier said he just couldnt plant
there.
NORTH AFRICA
Algeria Ramadan Toll 80 Dead:
Armed extremists killed 38 people, including a nomadic
family, in a 48-hour period beginning Jan. 1. The cattle-raising
family lost 22 members in Algerias Saida region, which was
also the scene of serious massacres in 1996 and 1997. In the month
of Ramadan, from mid-December to mid-January, nearly 80 civilians
and soldiers were killed and 30 injured by the extremists fighting
against the military-backed government. More than 65,000 Algerians
have been killed since early 1992, when authorities canceled a general
election in which the Islamic Salvation Front, the major Islamist
party, had taken a decisive lead.
Egyptian Excavations Uncover Earliest Writing:
The discovery of records of linen and oil deliveries
made 5,300 years ago in southern Egypt challenges the theory that
the Sumerians of southern Mesopotamia were the first people to develop
writing around 5,000 years ago. A German archeologist announced
that recently discovered carbon-dated (between 3,300 BC and 3,200
BC) Egyptian line drawings of animals, plants and mountains were
the initial stages of what later became intricate hieroglyphics.
Early Sumerian writing, he said, was not as developed as the writing
found on these Egyptian clay tablets. The tablets document taxes,
and contain lists of kings names, institutions, and traded
goods, indicating an advanced society.
U.S. Embassy Warning in Egypt:
The U.S. Embassy in Cairo warned Americans of possible
unspecified extremist attacks on U.S. targets in Egypt,
the Washington Times reported Jan 6. The embassy urges
Americans to remain vigilant and take appropriate steps to increase
their security awareness in order to reduce their vulnerability,
the embassy said in a statement also posted on its Web site. On
Christmas, Osama bin Laden told viewers of the Qatari satellite
television station Al-Jazira, Every American should be a target
for Muslims. Every American, those who fought us or paid for it
through taxes, is our enemy.
Moroccos Foreign Debt Reaches $19.5 Billion:
Moroccos foreign debt in 1998 is $19.5 billion,
unchanged from 1997. The debt was $21.7 billion in 1996 and $23
billion in 1995, a senior Finance Ministry official said. Morocco
has allocated around $1.7 billion in its 1998-99 fiscal budget to
service foreign debt. The ministry said 45 percent, or $8.7 billion,
of Moroccos global debt is held by nations of the Paris Club.
The remaining debt is held by various financial institutions, including
the World Bank.
Tunisia Sets Economic Goals:
Tunisias ninth economic plan has set a growth
rate target of 5.4 percent in tourism nights (a tourism night
is defined as one night spent by a tourist in a Tunisian hotel).
This growth rate would represent a continuation of Tunisias
impressive tourism boom of the past four decades. In 1962, Tunisia
had 4,000 hotel beds, while today it boasts nearly 180,000. Tunisia
is one of the most popular Arab tourist destinations, attracting
around 4.5 million visitors a year, according to the Khaleej
Times. International companies are submitting tenders for the
first installment of the National Amusement Park in Soukra, Tunisia.
The coming attraction will have a water park and amusement center.
Libyas Peoples Congress Agrees to Lockerbie
Trial:
Libyas Peoples Congress is satisfied with
the plan to hold a trial in a neutral country for two Libyans accused
of the 1988 bombing of a Pan American plane over Lockerbie, Scotland.
But after an eight-day session, Arab News reports the Peoples
Congress failed to issue a specific pronouncement on whether the
suspects should be extradited to The Hague for trial. The resolution
only called upon all parties to help remove obstacles so that
the trial can take place as soon as possible. It did not elaborate
on what the obstacles are.
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
Bosnian Civil War Reporter Was British MI6 Officer:
Dominic Lawson, currently the editor of Londons
Sunday Telegraph, admitted that articles written for Spectator
magazine while he was its editor were probably written
by a British foreign intelligence officer. An MI6 officer used the
pseudonym Kenneth Roberts with a Sarajevo dateline for articles
he wrote in 1994 in the Spectator and the London SundayTimes,
Londons Guardian reported Dec. 21, 1998. The articles
appeared to be part of an attempt to influence public opinion during
the Bosnian civil war by suggesting that all sides, not just the
Serbs, carried out atrocities.
TURKEY
Turks Find Puppy Love:
While some question improvements in Turkeys
human-rights record, there is no doubt that dogs are treated much
better than ever before. A front-page story in Turkeys Hurriyet
newspaper in January described an abandoned collie that refused
to eat because his heart was broken. Hundreds of readers tried to
adopt him. When the Soviet Union collapsed, Russian traders brought
pedigreed puppies at bargain prices into Turkey, starting a doggy
trend. Now laws are making their way through parliament to prevent
crimes against animals. Posters of Mesut Yilmaz, Turkeys recently
unseated prime minister, display him with his family and Daisy,
his Great Dane.
THE SUBCONTINENT
Peace Boat Joins India Peace March:
In a recent visit to Bombay, Fumiko Amano, a survivor
of the Hiroshima atomic bomb, appealed to the people of India, and
especially mothers, to demand milk and breadnot bombs. She
told fellow peace marchers, including 200 Japanese students on Dec.
19, that repeating the mistakes of the past was like walking through
the gates of hell. The Japanese students were part of a world cruise
sponsored by Peace Boat, a Japan-based organization that sails the
world each year in search of peaceful solutions to international
problems. The marchers also condemned recent air strikes in Iraq.
Bangladeshi Feminist Faces Charges:
Bangladeshi feminist writer Taslima Nasreen, who
has been in hiding for four years since religious extremists put
a bounty on her head, appeared before judges and was granted her
request for bail. She was accused of blasphemy for some remarks
in her book Nirbachita Column in 1994.
Pakistan Bullies Its Newspapers:
Critics charge that Pakistans state-run TV selects
news bulletins featuring the prime minister awarding degrees or
walking through the park showing his concern for animals, while
ignoring the countrys economic turmoil and growing lawlessness.
The critics insist that for real news and commentary, citizens must
turn to the newspapers. Now there is concern that the government
is pressuring newspapers to be less vocal by using tax probes and
investigations to tie newspapers in knots and freeze their bank
accounts so that employees are prevented from receiving their salaries.
Kashmiris Hold Rallies:
Kashmiris in Pakistan held rallies Jan. 5 to mark
the 50th anniversary of the adoption of the U.N. Security Council
resolution calling for Kashmiris to choose their form of government
in a plebiscite. Demonstrators presented a memorandum to the U.N.
observers office calling on the world community to honor
its pledge with Kashmiri people. Massacres in the Indian-occupied
side of the line of control in Kashmir have resulted in 60,000 deaths,
the Arab News reports, and rape, torture, plunder, abductions,
arbitrary detentions and shelling of civilian homes have become
routine. |