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For 14 years she
has been gathering with some 150
other female Saudi academics for
monthly diwaniyas, or
salons. At the home of one of
the group's members in Riyadh,
the Saudi capital, they talked
about the issues of the day: the
plight of Saudi women,
elections, civil society, and
domestic violence.
But now the
professor worries that the
government is beginning to
stifle her salon and others,
further backing away from making
substantial reforms.
These discussion
groups, which have been growing
in number in recent years, are
among the only outlets for
collective expression in a
country where public gatherings
and political parties are
banned.
She says she
received a troubling call from a
government official a few weeks
ago asking her to register the
group with the Ministry of
Interior or face police action
against her group. "The official
kept calling me, but I said I
would not believe what he was
saying unless he could send me
something in writing," recalls
the academic, who asked for
anonymity for fear of
retribution.
"My husband was
finally called in to have a
meeting with a Riyadh
Governorate official who told
him that a new law was going
into effect that would force all
discussion groups in private
homes who have guest speakers to
be registered with the Ministry
of Interior," she says.
Not only will
these discussion groups
apparently have to be registered
with the government, but each
may have to apply for permission
from the appropriate ministry
depending on the topic being
discussed, according to this
academic.
But the kingdom
appears to be sending mixed
signals to the Saudi salons.
Some groups have been told to
stop meeting altogether, while
others have not received any
notification to either register
or disband. No one has yet
received any order in writing.
"These groups
will have to register themselves
with their local police only if
they hold these meetings in
[rental vacation houses]," says
a Ministry of Interior
spokesman, who also denied that
people holding such meetings in
private homes would have to
register.
Sami Angawi, the
head of the Makkiah discussion
group in Jeddah, which meets
Tuesdays at his home, said he
had not been asked yet to
register or stop the meetings
that take place in his home.
But the Al-Ain
Cultural group in Al-Hassa,
which is 15 years old and mainly
discusses literary topics, was
told to stop meeting in January
2007. But this did not stop the
group, which has around 60
members, from participating in
an arts showcase organized by
the Saudi government.
"We haven't had
any regular meetings since
then," says Mohamed al-Naeem,
the head of the group and a
school principal. "But a smaller
group of us have been meeting to
produce a book of our collected
poems and short stories."
The slow pace of
substantial reform
Following the
first municipal elections in
more than 40 years in February
2005 and the enthronement of
reformed-minded King Abdullah in
August 2005 and his subsequent
pardon of three jailed
reformists, Saudis felt there
was a glimmer of hope for
political reform in the country.
Indeed, there
have been signs of some social
changes on the streets of
Riyadh. Women can be seen
without the traditional head
coverings and the country's
religious police, who enforce
the kingdom's strict moral code,
are less obvious.
But the arrest of
nine Saudi reformists on Feb.
10, 2007, dashed the last hopes
of many who were hoping for more
substantial reforms. And many
see the government move to
regulate salons as another sign
the kingdom is backing away from
allowing more political
openness.
The arrests took
place after the nine had signed
a petition addressed to King
Abdullah calling for political
reform and the splitting up of
the Ministry of Interior. If
this were implemented, it would
seriously weaken the powers of
the interior minister, Prince
Naif ibn Abdul Aziz, who is
known to be strongly opposed to
the reform movement.
"A group of us
met with Prince Naif in January
2004 before we were imprisoned,
and he strongly objected to the
use of the term 'reform,' "
recalls Matrouk al-Faleh, one of
the three jailed reformists
pardoned by King Abdullah in
late 2005.
Faleh says that
he believes one of the reasons
that the nine reformers were
arrested was that some of them
were about to announce the
formation of a political party,
something the government has
warned repeatedly it would not
allow. "These arrests are a
coverup on the part of the
Ministry of Interior to kill any
activation of democratic reform
demands," he says.
The government
has also accused some of the
nine arrested reformists with
sending money to "terrorists" in
Iraq, a charge strongly denied
by their lawyer Bassem Alim and
the relatives of Saud Al-Mokhtar,
one of the arrested reformists.
US Senator Ron
Wyden (D-Oregon), who is a
member of the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence, says
he also does not believe that
the reformists were sending
money to terrorists, telling
United Press International on
March 26, 2007, that "based on
the evidence I have seen, it
appears more likely that these
men were actually democracy
activists."
The nine jailed
reformists have been denied
access to their lawyers and
families, and are being held in
a secret location without being
charged or tried in a court of
law.
Still hope for
change
Despite all of
these setbacks, reformists like
Faleh and the female academic
are still optimistic that things
will gradually improve in five
to 10 years from now.
"We hope that
King Abdullah will continue
reform. We have some problems
with some of our senior
leadership who are opposing
change. We don't believe that
the Saudi public and the
religious establishment are
obstacles to reform," says Faleh.
"We want an
independent judiciary and a code
of public liberties that
guarantee freedom of expression,
participation and formation of
civil society groups," he adds.
The female
academic says that her group
plans to apply for permission to
continue operating. "These are
very disturbing messages we are
getting from them. Is the
government serious about reform
or not?" she asks. "So far, what
we have seen have been only
cosmetic reforms."
By Rasheed
Abou-Alsamh
| Contributor to The Christian
Science Monitor
JEDDAH, Saudi
Arabia
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