[talk.politics.mideast] Fax and opinions in Saudi Arabia

emv@msen.com (Ed Vielmetti) (06/20/91)

The Economist, 15 June 1991, has an article on how Saudi Arabia's vast
network of home fax machines has turned into a forum for a serious
semi-public debate on the future of the country.  "The drums of change
are beating, but not on television or in the newspapers.  The tom-tom
network is electronic: those who want to listen need a fax machine and
a video-cassette recorder."  Conservative Muslim clerics make video
and audio tapes of their political diatribe; westernized moderates
keep home fax machines beeping with their news.  Since each side
snarfs the other's private correspondence and faxes it out again with
abandon, faxing a political letter has become something like
publishing a pamphlet.

Six weeks ago, religious leaders sent a curt letter to the King
lobbying for control of the newly proposed 150-man consultative
counsel.  They spiced their letter with pointed demands for
"purification" of the government, redistribution of wealth, a stronger
army, a tight muzzle on the press, and a pro-Islamic foreign policy.
Naturally this letter became a hot item on the fax network, and the
religous leaders were irritated and embarrassed that it had hit the
public wires without their knowlege and prior consent.  They took
space in newspapers around the country to express their anger at "the
way pursued in disclosing and circulating what was written".  

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-- 
Edward Vielmetti, MSEN Inc. 	moderator, comp.archives 	emv@msen.com

"often those with the power to appoint will be on one side of a
controversial issue and find it convenient to use their opponent's
momentary stridency as a pretext to squelch them"