The same old kingdom?

Published May 25, 2018

SINCE Mohammed bin Salman’s rapid ascension to heir apparent of the Saudi throne, his pronouncements to radically reform the kingdom have come in tandem with broad crackdowns on his subjects.

In recent days, according to reports in the international media, at least 11 activists, mostly women, have been swept up in the security dragnet. International rights groups are expressing concern that the detainees, their whereabouts unknown, are being held without charge and interrogated without access to legal representation.

Meanwhile, a Saudi state security agency issued a statement branding these activists — several of whom have been women’s rights campaigners for decades and faced imprisonment before — as ‘traitors’ working with ‘hostile foreign elements’ to undermine the kingdom. Only weeks before the ban on women driving is due to be lifted, it is pertinent to ask: is this the new Saudi Arabia the millennial crown prince promised, in which women are entitled to drive — but not to speak?

Read: Some are paying a high price for feminism in the ‘new’ Saudi Arabia

Along with hope, there was scepticism of Mohammed bin Salman’s chimerical vision, big as it was on touting a neoliberal rebranding exercise yet thin on any discussion of genuine political reform.

Following a spectacularly orchestrated media blitz to woo the West that would have rankled many in his still deeply conservative kingdom, the recent arrests might indicate an attempt to appease hard-line regressives at home.

The Saudi women’s movement represents one of the last remaining spaces of civil rights advocacy in a country where protests are illegal and dissent is quashed. Women in patriarchal societies are often treated as expendable collateral — and their rights the first to be bargained away — in any renegotiation of power, but no modernisation drive can succeed without their emancipation.

The crown prince has been notably silent in the face of actions that clearly contradict his progressive public posture and his professed commitment to a relative relaxation in the state’s control over personal freedoms. That inevitably raises the question as to whether there are, after all, constraints on his power in the kingdom.

Published in Dawn, May 25th, 2018

Opinion

Editorial

X post facto
Updated 19 Apr, 2024

X post facto

Our decision-makers should realise the harm they are causing.
Insufficient inquiry
19 Apr, 2024

Insufficient inquiry

UNLESS the state is honest about the mistakes its functionaries have made, we will be doomed to repeat our follies....
Melting glaciers
19 Apr, 2024

Melting glaciers

AFTER several rain-related deaths in KP in recent days, the Provincial Disaster Management Authority has sprung into...
IMF’s projections
Updated 18 Apr, 2024

IMF’s projections

The problems are well-known and the country is aware of what is needed to stabilise the economy; the challenge is follow-through and implementation.
Hepatitis crisis
18 Apr, 2024

Hepatitis crisis

THE sheer scale of the crisis is staggering. A new WHO report flags Pakistan as the country with the highest number...
Never-ending suffering
18 Apr, 2024

Never-ending suffering

OVER the weekend, the world witnessed an intense spectacle when Iran launched its drone-and-missile barrage against...