Posts Tagged ‘Saudi Arabia’

The Houthi v. all: Saudi may have jet fighters, but the Houthi have magic

Monday, November 9th, 2009
Saudis at the gates. Well, if there were gates. Let's be kind and call the imaginary line between Saudi and Yemen a "boundary."

Saudis at the gates. Well, if there were gates. Let's be kind and call the imaginary line between Saudi and Yemen a "border."

So I have been quite remiss in updating about the fighting in Yemen. This tidbit, by way of Waq al-Waq, hopefully makes up for that somewhat. As background information, the Saudis have started to get involved in Saada in a big way, bombing and shelling Saudi/Yemeni (depending on who you ask, but likely both countries’) territory in response to cross-border actions by the Houthi rebels (who claim that Yemen was encamped in a strategic mountain just on the other side of the border, on the Saudi side) Everyone denies everything, naturally. Here’s an undoubtedly scrupulous Saudi source on recent Houthi methods:

A young infiltrator was arrested Monday while he was going through the border on his donkey posing as a refugee to join his family at the refugee camp. As he was being questioned, he pulled out a gun to fire at the troops who quickly responded by shooting him dead.

Two more infiltrators in Jarbah in Abu Aresh Governorate did not resist arrest. They were dressed in women’s clothes.

An armed infiltrator was arrested in his underwear with strange drawings on his back. He was believed to have been practising black magic on Saudi troops.

The infiltrators used animals with lamps on them to attempt to trick Saudi troops into following them.

The animals, however, were detected by infrared cameras and night vision systems. After regaining captured areas, Saudi forces scaled back their assault along the mountainous border and captured 200 or more infiltrators, a government advisor told AFP Monday.

If you build it, will they come? Capital investment in the Gulf

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009
Burj Dubai, the tallest man-made structure in the world. Burj means tower in Arabic.

Burj Dubai, the tallest man-made structure in the world. Burj means tower in Arabic.

Brian Stelter wrote yesterday in the business section of the nytimes about the fallow film production studios in Dubai. Check the great lede:

When the heiress Paris Hilton traveled here in June and July to audition female friends for her show “My New BFF,” her producers had access to state-of-the-art studios and a government eager to import a touch of Hollywood glamour to the Middle East.

But to adhere to the region’s Islamic norms, many of the ingredients in reality TV were taboo: there would be no drinking, no cursing, no dramatic displays of affection. The producers thought about filming a scene at a water park, but passed on the option of dressing the contestants in religiously appropriate swimwear.

I do have to fault the article for relying on the simple equation of Hollywood/America = Sex. After all, not all American films revolved around sex–though if they are set in the Middle East, they’re probably about terrorism and oil.

“Syriana” and “The Kingdom” were both filmed in Dubai (though arguably, that was a win/win for both Dubai and the filmmakers, since it let the filmmakers approximate Saudi Arabia–while Dubai could make themselves look better, at the expense of Saudi’s flaws). But to date, they are the only Western films to be partially made in the Emirates.  I have to wonder, why was “Body of Lies,” a similar political thriller about terrorism, turned down in 2007? Maybe Dubai doesn’t want to get typecast …

This month, the government rejected the request from the producers of the sequel of “Sex and the City,” which was to be partially set in Dubai:

Dubai Studio City’s facilities have been used in 26 feature films, mostly from gulf countries and Bollywood. … In rejecting the request from the producers of the “Sex and the City” sequel this summer, Mr. Sharif said, the authorities took into account “the multicultural fabric of the society and its perceptions.”

According to a government official familiar with the script, its plot lines — with the women coming to Dubai, spending money lavishly and cavorting — were perceived to reinforce negative stereotypes about the region.

Good luck with that. When I was in Doha, and told female (khalijeeat) acquaintances that I had lived in New York City, they immediately asked if it was like “Sex and the City.” Some of them wanted nothing more than to move there and live like Carrie Bradshaw and the rest of them. So are the censoring authorities more afraid of stereotypes of the Gulf, or of their women following the Western example?

And so the article goes, assessing the hurdles to film production in Dubai, including failed co-productions (the abysmal “Shorts,” which just opened to pathetic box office returns in America). The articles focuses on Islamic law and censorship as the principal problem for the Gulf’s investments:

Dubai, its rival Abu Dhabi and other Persian Gulf cities face enormous hurdles as they try to diversify their economies by fostering creativity and becoming entertainment capitals. Chief among those hurdles: they operate under Islamic law. Hollywood does not. So far, the oil-rich countries have proved more able to pay for fancy media productions and to build expensive film facilities than to actually lure production to the Middle East, as economic efforts run up against their traditional values and censorship.

The article also ends on this note:

Even more than the staff issues, enduring issues of censorship may be the most stubborn hurdle for the gulf region — even if, as Mr. Hirschorn jokingly said, “our government censor turned out to be a really nice guy.”

Perhaps that’s part of the problem. Perhaps that’s why (DUH) a Paris Hilton reality TV show probably won’t have much to with the Gulf.

But the real problem in my eyes is not the strict moral codes in the Gulf countries, but the failure of their labor markets. The piece briefly touches on this point:

Some of the other hurdles are logistical. For instance, local requirements for full-time work visas mean that the country lacks a robust freelance market to support productions. Jamal al-Sharif, the executive director of Dubai Studio City, which was founded in 2005 to stimulate the regional film industry, acknowledged that “a vital ingredient for building the film industry is access to talent.”

The current business model of Hollywood is dependent on putting together “packaged” deals. Essentially, every film is established as a singular corporate entity, a one-0ff, a model that requires a lot of flexibility–negotiations must occur between every component part in a film production.

This essentially means that the talent–not just actors, writers, directors, but the production assistants, set designers, everyone beyond the camera and behind the scenes–must be brought in to Dubai for one movie. And then, once the production is over,  everyone goes home–because the countries’ visa laws won’t permit unemployed foreigners to remain in the country.

There is no efficiency involve. The Emirates doesn’t have taxes, but that doesn’t negate the expense required to move an entire production–full of all these moving parts, subject to shifting negotiations–to a country far away. And it’s not like someone can stick around after the filmmaking is done, or if something changes in the negotiations and participants need to shift around–visas in the Gulf countries are subject to strict regulations. Lose your current job, and you must leave.

The Gulf’s labor laws are one of the biggest problems in capitalizing on their outsized capital investments. Places like the Media Zone in Abu Dhabi or Education City in Doha won’t flourish on their own. Regardless of their stellar, expensive facilities, these places actually require even more, continuous investments in human capital. Skilled workers, whether engineers or educators or filmmakers or journalists, must be recruited from the West or other Arab countries and brought over on a case-by-case basis. And once again, it’s not terribly easy to change jobs once you’re in country–don’t count on an unemployment period for job hunting, because even as a Westerner or a fellow Arab, you will be deported.

This is to say nothing of the unskilled laborers, working in the Gulf. For more on them, read this lengthy investigative article I wrote while in Doha. It also delves a little deeper into the problems of the labor laws if you’re curious on that count.

In the end, if the Gulf countries want to make the most of their investments, it’s not the morality laws that need to be changed. It’s the labor laws.

More on the Yemeni military offensive against the Houthi

Thursday, August 13th, 2009
The head Houthi

The head Houthi

This is some old news, in internet time, but I’m a bit behind on my reading today.

Yemen kept up its military offensive today  against Shiite rebels in the northwest as troops, artillery and aircraft attacked a militant stronghold near the border with Saudi Arabia.

The mountainous Saada province shook with gunfire and explosions for a second day. The Sunni-led government, which claims the rebels have killed more than 330 people over the last year, said that militants had taken over schools and seized teachers. The Associated Press quoted a health official as saying that 12 people had been killed in the fighting.

I’d just like to point again to Babylon & Beyond, the brilliant LA Times blog about the Middle East, which carries the most fascinating stories. Like the tale of the pitiful Mazen Abdul Jawad, the pimp of Jidda (which a friend likened to being “the coldest point in hell”), who was arrested for discussing his sexual exploits on a Lebanese TV show, which is broadcast by satellite into his home state of Saudi Arabia–with public outcry leading to a bit of a goverment/media frenzy. And now the ministry of culture in Saudi has closed the Lebanese station’s offices in Saudi.

Anyway, back to Saudi’s neighbor to the South. This insurgency is closest to their larger northern neighbor, so that may explain the much harsher response:

The battle against the Shiite militants in the northwest is the latest flareup in a 5-year-old rebellion led by Abdul Malik Houthi. The Shiites, who want a return to clerical law, claim they are persecuted and that their region has not been developed. The government of President Ali Abdullah Saleh said the offensive was called after the insurgents violated a recent ceasefire.

A statement earlier this week by Yemen’s Supreme Security Committee said:  “The state will strike these elements . . . with an iron fist until they surrender themselves to justice.”

The other possibility is sectarian. I’m too many miles away to tell. I hear the countryside is quite beautiful. But not the kind of place where you want to go for a picnic. Not coincidentally, the Yemeni government has blamed the Houthis for the kidnapping of those 9 foreign workers, 3 of whom were killed, while the other 6 remain missing.

The Last Boy Scouts

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

Saudi Arabia recently donated $3 million to the World Scout Foundation. Also, “The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) recently signed a historic agreement with the Saudi Arabian Boy Scouts Association to participate in a youth and leader exchange program to further promote understanding of different cultures.” Which seems pretty necessary according to a top nytimes article today, about what the Explorer-Scouts are up to in the good ol’ USA:

In a competition in Arizona that he did not oversee, Deputy Lowenthal said, one role-player wore traditional Arab dress. “If we’re looking at 9/11 and what a Middle Eastern terrorist would be like,” he said, “then maybe your role-player would look like that. I don’t know, would you call that politically incorrect?”

Yes, I would. Particularly because the 9/11 hijackers, just to use the same exact example Deputy Lowenthal cites, looked like Western businessmen. You know, perhaps we should institutionalize racial profiling and racial discrimination. Or just expel/ban all Arabs from America, just to be safe. And have 14 year olds learning how to use coercive violence against illegal immigrants.

The Explorers program, a coeducational affiliate of the Boy Scouts of America that began 60 years ago, is training thousands of young people in skills used to confront terrorism, illegal immigration and escalating border violence — an intense ratcheting up of one of the group’s longtime missions to prepare youths for more traditional jobs as police officers and firefighters. …

The training, which leaders say is not intended to be applied outside the simulated Explorer setting, can involve chasing down illegal border crossers as well as more dangerous situations that include facing down terrorists and taking out “active shooters,” like those who bring gunfire and death to college campuses. In a simulation here of a raid on a marijuana field, several Explorers were instructed on how to quiet an obstreperous lookout.

“Put him on his face and put a knee in his back,” a Border Patrol agent explained. “I guarantee that he’ll shut up.” …

Cathy Noriego, also 16, said she was attracted by the guns. The group uses compressed-air guns — known as airsoft guns, which fire tiny plastic pellets — in the training exercises, and sometimes they shoot real guns on a closed range.

“I like shooting them,” Cathy said. “I like the sound they make. It gets me excited.”