Inequalities among Arabs: A case of Saudi Arabia
-DR. ABDUL RUFF COLACHAL
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World wants to know true Islam and
looks to Arab world for comprehending true Islamic faith. But Arabs also exist
only to promote the interests of the rich.
Islam originated for entire humanity
and as such it should make all efforts to uplift every section of society in
every Muslim nation. Muslim rulers, unlike their counterparts elsewhere, have a
prime responsibility for making Islam humanity religion to undertake plans to
help the poor.
What is the point in having huge
national wealth abundant resources, when people
starve, suffer without basic facilities?
Oil rich Arab nations are surging
ahead with tall buildings, huge private and state wealth, vast gold
reserves inclusive, but their own people do not have
sufficient back ups.
When Arab nations refuse to implement Islamic law and promote
Islamic faith, other Muslim nations also do the same. Islam so far
remains a religion that also believes in a few formalities.
Home to the world’s largest proven
oil reserves, Saudi Arabia in West Asia produces more oil than any other Arab
country. Saudi is competed only by Russia in oil production.
Riyadh has the largest economy
in the Arab world with a GDP of $745 billion. Though Saudi is economically
strong enough, Saudi oil revenues which account for 90 percent of
government revenue have been falling —fell by 9 percent, Saudi
economic growth declined significantly last year.
However, the
rich continues to thrive in Arab and non-Arab Muslim world. But
Saudi poverty and unemployment in the first ever Islamic nation has been a
serious issue for years now and the kingdom has not taken any serious steps to
reduce, if not remove completely, the poverty-unemployment levels. Even
the sharp social spending increases announced by the monarchy after the mass
working class uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt failed to make a significant dent
in Saudi poverty and unemployment.
Amid increasing political tensions
throughout the Middle East, Saudi Arabia inclusive, Finance Ministry of Saudi
kingdom announced its 2014 budget of 855 billion riyals (US$228 billion) last
month.
The IMF has warned that the Saudi
budget could fall into deficit by 2016. While it still has a
public reserve fund of about $700 billion, the leveling-off of oil production
will force it to dip into these reserves if it does not begin to slash
spending.
Though the kingdom has not yet
announced any cuts, the projected 2014 budget may already result in public
sector salary cuts; recurring expenditures could be cut by 1.5 percent.
Arabs promote capitalism and, in
doing so, also aid the imperialist forces. US diplomatic cables released by
WikiLeaks shed some light on income of Saudi royal family which still thinks
God has given all this wealth just enjoy. In the 1990s, a handful of
Saudi princes skimmed off the income from the sale of up to 1 million barrels
of oil per day. Thousands of other members of the royal family received large
sums.
Notwithstanding vast oil wealth, an
estimated one-quarter of the Saudi population lives in poverty. Between 2
million and 4 million Saudi citizens are believed to be living on less than
$530 a month. Total unemployment rose from 10.5 percent in 2009 to 12.1
percent at the end of 2012. About 70 percent of the population is younger than
30, and youth unemployment has stubbornly remained at roughly 30 percent for
over a decade. Unemployment is highest among women, at 35 percent.
Liberal migration policy of Saudi
kingdom as elsewhere in Arab world has increased foreign workers in
many folds year after year. Despite Saudi Arabia’s huge petrodollars from oil
sales, it has long faced enormous social inequality among Saudi citizens, and
between Saudi citizens and the vast number of foreign workers, largely from
Asia, that now constitute one third of the population.
The 2014 budget represents an
increase of only 4.3 percent over the previous year, making it the smallest
increase since 2003.
Saudi does nothing to remedy high
poverty and double digit unemployment as the population, which rose from 6
million in 1979 to 28 million today, continues to grow.
The Saudi kingdom’s budgetary
concerns have now been compounded by fears stemming from the tactical shift of
the US away from backing pro-Saudi Sunni Islamist militias in the Syrian war,
and towards a US rapprochement with Iran. Since the 2011 uprisings in
Tunisia and Egypt, the Sunni royal family has also repeatedly suppressed
popular opposition and protests in Saudi Arabia’s Shia-dominated Eastern
Province, home to the kingdom’s oil fields. The Saudi monarchy, which deprives
its citizens of basic democratic rights, has sought to ruthlessly suppress
public discussion of social inequality.
Social tensions—reflecting high
unemployment, poverty, and escalating geopolitical and sectarian tensions
throughout the Middle East—are mounting.
With so many projects started,
administrative and technical capacities of both government agencies and the
private sector have been stretched to the limit and beyond. As result,
hundreds, perhaps thousands, of projects are running behind schedule. Trying to
contain anger over the unfinished projects, King Abdullah has publicly
admonished ministers and other officials repeatedly for leaving projects
unfinished.
The Saudi government does not publish
data on its income. The lack of a broader economic base threatens to undermine the
kingdom’s finances. The central factor behind the failure of the Saudi economy
is the parasitism of the Saudi royal family, whose absolute rule has been for
decades one of the main props of US imperialism’s hegemony in the Middle East.
Corruption is rampant in Mideast and
even Saudi officials insist on bribes from western and other nations for
clearing their “matters". Former UK premier Tony Blair faced
investigation over the bribes deal between UK and Saudi Arabia. Blair, a
co-author oif NATO war on Islam, eventually had to leave 10 Down
Street, London.
This hollow mindset of Arab people
shows Islam in bad cast.
The rage of inequalities among people
in Saudi Arabia and other Arab nations send signals to other non-Arab Muslim
nations of inability of Islam in providing true equality among people.
Rich and poor are in all societies and Islamic world should be different
fundamentally and qualitatively.
The non-serious attitude of Arabs
towards prohibited stuffs like liquor and smoke have made the
Muslims working there also imbibe the liquor culture from Mideast and return to
their third world Muslim nations as full time drunkards.
As a result, Muslims globally
continue to cheat, keep lies intact; they refuse to abide by Islamic law, faith
and life patterns. They look to the west and non-Islamic world for
guidance.
The Arab-returned-Muslims have plenty
of money gained by all means but have not learned anything from Arabs on
Islamic faith. They also cheat and deceive fellow Muslims at home and bribe
officials and police to gain wealth illegally.
Arab hypocrisy is ruining world
Muslims.
Have the Arab Muslims also got
nothing to know from the Holy Quran and from the life of our Holy Prophet who
was an Arab- the most honest in that?
Is Islam, then, also a mere
entertainment and enjoyment resource for Muslims like other religions, meant
for the rich to rule and care adman about underprivileged and poor?
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