29.12.04

Merry Christmas?

According to the Arab Times a few days ago, Islamists in Jahra objected to a local supermarket supplying Christmas paraphernalia as they deemed it ‘haram’. The supermarket backed down and removed the said items. This is just plain silly for so many reasons. Where did they get this ‘haram’ ruling from? Presumably these same Islamists aren’t aware that Islam actually recognises Jesus Christ as the most important prophet after Mohammed. Quite rightfully though, most Kuwaitis, and other residents of Kuwait, have no problem in Christians celebrating Christ’s birthday.

As a Christian I can accept objecting to the crass commercialisation of Christmas, but then there are traditional elements which it would be a shame to miss out on. You certainly don’t see any complaints about the crass commercialisation of Eid Al-Fitr or other Islamic celebrations. What’s lacking here is any sense of tolerance of anyone with a different view, let alone a different religion. I’m certainly not going to protest if the local supermarket wants to sell “Ramadan Kareem” cards, wherever I’m living in the world.

But, just to show I’m not picking on Islamists here, the very same edition of the newspaper carried an article about some small town in the good ol’ USA objecting to a Muslim cemetery in their backyard. What’s the problem guys… I’m sure they’re not going to be burying those terrorists shooting up the good guys in Iraq!

In every country around the world there are those who just don’t get it! Result: racism, intolerance of others with a different view, lack of understanding of how things really are versus what’s portrayed in the media, etc. I guess that’s the scary part of ever returning to my home country to live – small world view.

And for something completely different, the Ministry of Planning (sounds like some Soviet-era institution - maybe they should rename this Ministry of Statistics, as that’s all it is), issued a press release about numbers of people employed in the private sector…
Kuwaitis make up just two percent of the workforce in the private sector, the majority of whom are businessmen.
Wow, less than I thought. If I’m reading this correctly, it means an astounding 98% of eligible-to-work Kuwaitis are working in the public sector! (assuming there’s no unemployed Kuwaitis). How does this fit with the Kuwaitisation targets in the private sector then? I know banks, for one category of private sector employers, have to have 45% Kuwaiti staff now, rising to 47% by September 2005.

26.12.04

Kuwait - the utopian welfare state

On a regular basis, there are calls to wipe electricity & water debts - this is just the latest in yesterday's Arab Times:

Panel exempts citizens from paying accrued utilities bills
KUWAIT CITY: The National Assembly's Legislative Affairs Committee has
given its approval to exempt citizens from paying their accumulated electricity
and water consumption bills, sources told Al-Seyassah. The committee said
although citizens should pay the electricity and water fees, which is subsidised
by the government, the concerned government departments had failed to collect
these bills on time causing the dues to increase to an extent that citizens are
now unable to pay. The committee urged the government to implement a new
strategy to collect these bills from citizens on time to ensure they don't
accumulate again. After approving a suggestion to exempt citizens from paying
the accumulated electricity and water consumption bills, members of the
committee decided to put the suggestion in a law and leave details on the amount
and period of exemption to a special technical committee. Members of the
committee also decided to adjust the amount already paid by some citizens for
the exemption period against their future consumption.

Further encouragement not to pay your bills. If every now and again, your bills are wiped because you haven't paid them, then why would anyone in the right mind pay anything for electricity and water? Amazing.

Funnily enough, the same edition of the Arab Times features a school children's walkathon aimed at conserving water and electricity and titled 'My rights and obligation towards best life (sic)'. Why conserve water & electricity if it's free? No wonder, Kuwait is a world leader in electricity and water consumption per capita. And, of course Kuwait is one of the world's poorest areas in terms of water resources, with virtually no renewable fresh-water supplies. This article back in 1994 is a little dated but shows Kuwait having the lowest annual renewable water supply in the region... and I don't think this will have changed much. What a shame we can't make more use of the rains that caused flooding the week before last!

Here's an article from earlier this year referring to water rationing in Kuwait.

Oh, and by the way, it seems as though making internet telephone calls are illegal in Kuwait... news to me! According to the Kuwait Times (and also reported in the Arab Times)...

Asian held
A Pakistani was arrested at Khaitan on charges of selling international
calls at 50 fils a minute using a computer. The Pakistani was well known in the
Kheitan area for this operation. He was apprehended when one of the security men
approached him for a call. Net phone cards where found in his person which is
illegal in Kuwait.

As if the phone companies (effectively a duopoly with the 2 mobile phone companies, or cartel when you include the Ministry who control land-lines) don't screw you enough already, charging for all incoming mobile calls, and if you happen to live in a new residential area you can't even get a residential line, 15 months and we're still waiting... so I can't even use internet telephony if I wanted to, and have to rely on a flaky GPRS conncetion through the mobile phone to get internet / email access. Satellite TV providers have yet to get their act together either. Showtime can only do satellite download and you still have to use GPRS for the upload, which will only compound the problems using GPRS. Orbit has been promising 2-way internet access since I subscribed in July, but each time I ask when it will be available I get the typical "don't know" brush-off. Yeah, yeah, I know, I chose to live in a new area to avoid exorbitant rent... you get what you pay for.

21.12.04

And on the subject of reform...

Today's Kuwait Times:

Firm steps soon to stamp out corruption, says Sharar

KUWAIT By A Saleh: The Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs Mohammed Dhaifullah Sharar has reiterated government's commitment to stamp out corruption in high places. Speaking at the diwaniya of MP Awwad Barad, the minister acknowledged that all government establishments were plagued with corruption and said that appropriate legislation would be brought in to eliminate the all-encompassing social malady. The government is currently pursuing a three-pronged strategy, fighting corruption, economic reforms and providing basic services, Sharar said, pointing out that Kuwait is already lagging 12 years behind other countries in the region and it is time to march ahead. He added that corruption is the primary concern when pursuing reforms and the government was aiming to improve its services with the help of modern technologies in the ministries. Sharar mentioned that the Prime Minister had requested his ministers to meet people and find out their problems and suggest solutions. He urged the citizens to discuss with their MPs the issues and grievances, adding that the National Assembly is capable of enacting necessary legislation. He said the government was fully aware of the shortfalls in health and education sectors, and that necessary steps are being taken to remedy them. He observed that most of the existing laws were counter-productive and they hampered progress. "They were issued in the 60's and were hugely influenced by political situation typical of those days", said Sharar, urging that a 'revolution' was necessary in the Kuwaiti laws to put the country on the track of economic revival.
Is there some substance here, or just words?

Arab Human Development

After a recent post by Zaydoun on Arab reform, I thought I'd download copies of the 2002 and 2003 Arab Human Development Reports. After a bit of searching I managed to locate free download copies, rather than pay the UN or booksellers... really this should be free, particularly to all readers in the Arab world!

In my search I also came across an Economist article from a couple of years ago that came out at the time of the first report. I probably read it at the time, but of course it's still extremely relevant. A couple of excerpts from the article follow:

The barrier to better Arab performance is not a lack of resources, concludes the report, but the lamentable shortage of three essentials: freedom, knowledge and womanpower. Not having enough of these amounts to what the authors call the region's three “deficits”. It is these deficits, they argue, that hold the frustrated Arabs back from reaching their potential—and allow the rest of the world both to despise and to fear a deadly combination of wealth and backwardness.

Freedom. This deficit, in the UNDP's interpretation, explains many of the fundamental things that are wrong with the Arab world: the survival of absolute autocracies; the holding of bogus elections; confusion between the executive and the judiciar (the report points out the close linguistic link between the two in Arabic); constraints on the media and on civil society; and a patriarchal, intolerant, sometimes suffocating social environment.

The area is rich in all the outward trappings of democracy. Elections are held and human-rights conventions are signed. But the great wave of democratisation that has opened up so much of the world over the past 15 years seems to have left the Arabs untouched. Democracy is occasionally offered, but as a concession, not as a right.

“The transfer of power through the ballot box is not a common
phenomenon in the Arab world,” the report says politely. Moreover, senior public servants, from ministers down, are seldom appointed solely on the basis of merit. People are given jobs not because of what they know, but because of whom they know. The result, all too often, is an unmoving, unresponsive central authority and an incompetent public administration. Freedom of expression and freedom of association are both sharply limited. The report quotes Freedom House, an American-based monitor of political and civil rights, in recording that no Arab country has genuinely free media, and only three have “partly free”. The rest are not free.

Civil society, in the Arab world, has a terribly long way to go. NGOs are hobbled by legal and administrative obstacles laid in their path by authorities deeply suspicious of what they might be up to. But they also suffer from internal weaknesses, often getting their money either from foreign sources, which adds to the suspicions, or from the government, which defeats the object of their creation.

Knowledge. “If God were to humiliate a human being,” wrote Imam Ali bin abi Taleb in the sixth century, “He would deny him knowledge.” Although the Arabs spend a higher percentage
of GDP on education than any other developing region, it is not, it seems, well spent. The quality of education has deteriorated pitifully, and there is a severe mismatch between the labour market and the education system.

Adult illiteracy rates have declined but are still very high: 65m adults are illiterate, almost two-thirds of them women. Some 10m children still have no schooling at all.

One of the gravest results of their poor education is that the Arabs, who once led the world in science, are dropping ever further behind in scientific research and in information technology. Investment in research and development is less than one-seventh of the world average. Only 0.6% of the population uses the Internet, and 1.2% have personal computers.

Another, no less grave, result is the dearth of creativity. The report comments sadly on the severe shortage of new writing, and, for instance, the decline in the film industry. Nor are foreign books much translated: in the 1,000 years since the reign of the Caliph Mamoun, say the authors, the Arabs have translated as many books as Spain translates in one year.

Women's status. The one thing that every outsider knows about the Arab world is that it does not treat its women as full citizens. The report sees this as an awful waste: how can a society prosper when it stifles half its productive potential?After all, even though women's literacy rates have trebled in the past 30 years, one in every two Arab women still can neither read nor write. Their participation in their countries' political and economic life is the lowest in the world.

Governments and societies (and sometimes, as in Kuwait, societies and parliamentarians are more backward than their governments) vary in the degrees of bad treatment they mete out to women. But in nearly all Arab countries, women suffer from unequal citizenship and legal entitlements. The UNDP has a “gender-empowerment measure” which shows the Arabs near the bottom (according to this measure, sub-Saharan Africa ranks even worse). But the UN was able to measure only 14
of the 22 Arab states, since the necessary data were not available in the others. This, as the report says, speaks for itself, reflecting the general lack of concern in the region for women's desire to be allowed to get on.

Why it all went wrong
A country can have one or two of these deficits, says Clovis Maksoud, a respected Lebanese involved in the report's preparation, and still surge ahead. Singapore, for instance, manages to prosper without offering much political freedom. It is when a country or a region suffers from all three deficits that it is in such a bad way.

and...

Do not search or question
The most delicate issue of all, again carefully skirted by the authors of the report, is the part that Islam plays in delaying and impeding the Arab world's advance towards the ever-receding renaissance that its intellectuals crave. One of the report's signed articles explains Islam's support for justice, peace, tolerance, equilibrium and all good things besides. But most secularists believe that the pervasive Islamisation of society, which in several Arab countries has largely replaced the frightening militancy of the 1980s and early 1990s, has played a significant part in stifling constructive Arab thought.

From their schooldays onwards, Arabs are instructed that they
should not defy tradition, that they should respect authority, that truth should be sought in the text and not in experience. Fear of fawda (chaos) and fitna (schism) are deeply engrained in much Arab-Islamic teaching. “The role of thought”, wrote a Syrian intellectual “is to explain and transmit...and not to search and question.”

Interesting aside about Kuwait societies and parliamentarians being more backward than their governments! Some good fodder for the reformists in Kuwait. Of course, this is the Economist's view (i.e. Anglo-saxon liberal economist establishment view) and like everything written needs to taken with a 'pinch of salt', but it's usually one of my favourite reads.

Further on this theme of reform in the region, Dubai last week held a 3-day Arab Strategy Forumn, which I only found out about after the event. A friend attended though and offered the following insights (which I hope he doesn't mind me reproducing here):

  • The involvement of women in society, economics and politics was a given by all speakers. It wasn't even an issue. About a third of the attendees were women including some leaders and speakers.
  • Everyone sees clearly that society gives the mandate to leadership they just don't know the best way to do it in their society (i.e. they are sure that Western Democracy is a wrong road).
  • The Westerners speaking were often blind to the sins of the West even if Arabs have the same sins. E.g. the American World Bank rep (who is supposedly a specialist on the Arab world) praised Palestine for having low levels of corruption because it has almost no bribery. He doesn't realise that whilst bribery is a gross sin in Palestine, power is still used to distort due process (it is just that no money changes hands). A common sin in the Arab world is "wasta" - the use of influence to change something into your favour. Arabs recognise it as a sin & would translate it into English as "Access to Government" or "Lobbying" But of course the World Banker sits amid lobbying and can't see it as designed to distort the use of power, and therefore he missed the fact that the Palestinians themselves know that their authority needs radical cleaning!
  • The definition of an Arab was unclear. It was assumed that all Arabs are Muslims, but sometimes the Arab world was restricted to the rich Gulf states, sometimes to the Middle East. I wonder how the Algerians / Moroccans / Tunisians / Sudanese felt. The Libyan foreign minister was even asked on the platform whether Libya was Arab or African (the answer was something like "We are both, but African has been more loyal to us"). Of course, the Lebanese don't think they are Arab anyway, as one person said to me, "Don't ask me what an Arab is. It certainly is not defined by language because my mother tongue is Arabic and I am not an Arab. I am Lebanese." Thus at this forum to discuss where the Arab world is going, there was not even a clear view of who "we" are, let alone where we are going? I guess it was like all the English speaking nations meeting to discuss "our strategy" when we are too much aware of our differences. The difference is that Arabs expect unity. As one Arab said, "If Europe can achieve unity, despite its differences why is it that the Arab world with one common language, one common religion, one common value system, can't achieve even a 10% of the unity. If any region should be able to achieve unity it is us and yet we are still where we were 100 years ago." Unity involves trust. Trust involves loyalty (rather than conspiracy) & no one is ever more loyal than the top guy. In the Arab world, "The Top Guy" is fundamentally a law unto Himself. In order to trust you have to promise & "The Top Guy" makes no promises.
  • Why are the Arabs so self-critical of themselves as a group but not self-critical of themselves as individuals. "We are a mess" seems much easier to say than "I am a mess." Do we have this same tendency too?

On this last point, this seems to be the same theme I'm trying to teach my children. You've got to take responsibility for your own mess / life / decisions / circumstances, etc. You have to acknowledge and take accountability for your own life. Bottom line is you're not a victim, you're creating your own experiences - the situations you are in and the way you feel about those situations. So don't blame others for your situation. I guess in simpler language the message is, "grow up, and get a life".

15.12.04

Waiting for the post

An interesting rant in today's Kuwait Times newspaper...

Kuwait postal system works at snail's pace

KUWAIT By Celia Al-Manea: It's a well-known fact that mail is Kuwait is slower than the coming of Christmas when you are a child. The bureaucracy-ridden, inefficient and poorly managed postal service fails to deliver anything of value to its customers. Letters sent locally can take weeks, even months to arrive. Packages sit in the Shuwaikh post office for days and days while the notice sent to inform their owner of their arrival suffers the same time-consuming delays as all other letters. Most businesses and organisations that need to send letters or packages and ensure that they arrive on time, send them by courier. Because of this, privately owned courier services are flourishing in Kuwait. But the government is still funding a national postal office and spending millions every year to pay salaries, provide offices, electricity, computers, stamps, paper, uniforms, etc. Why then the service is no service at all? Why, when postal systems have been developing since the use of pigeons and are now complex, efficient and functioning organisations around the world, is Kuwait so far behind? Why when the country earns more than $40 billion GDP can't it fund an efficient and reliable postal service? Kuwait is renowned throughout the world for its innovative, efficient and clever use of water desalination processes. It is also respected for encouraging the scientific development and research of oil lifting and pumping processes. And yet, it can't send a simple letter from Salmiya to Shuwaikh. Why? Does the government think that communication among people and businesses is irrelevant? Are the people who run the postal system incompetent? Lazy? Corrupt? What prevents the government from turning its attention to something vital to the health and growth of a flourishing economy? Why do members of parliament have time to bitch and moan about mixed gender concerts but can't be bothered to ask why it takes two weeks for a letter to come from Hawally to Rawda? The postal system in Kuwait falls under the responsibility of the Ministry of Communication. The problem with this arrangement is that the Minister of Communication Mohammad Abu Al-Hassan is so busy defending himself from the internal threats of grilling that even if he wanted to, reforming the postal services would be impossible. I would send him a letter of complaint, but who knows if he'd get it.

[I won't bother putting in hyperlink as newspaper doesn't
archive web pages.]


What more can I say. I always have a laugh when I receive mail that has made it's way to my office desk. The first thing I do is check the Post Office's date stamp to see how long they've had my mail for... 1 week, 1 month, 2 months... incredible. And, that's if I receive it. Many things posted to me from NZ or the UK just don't arrive at all (including kid's birthday presents which is a pain). So basically I inform any company / person I deal with internationally, either deal with me via the web or email, or forget it. I guess this is how most Kuwaitis feel too.

The cynical view is, forget reform... too difficult. Accept that it's just another non-value adding employment scheme. Just don't make the mistake of expecting that it will work..., move on and use the latest technologies, and if you have to deliver physical documents, letters, things, well that's what courier companies are for.

But that's the problem in this country and why nothing works as well as it could. What happens is that even the courier companies have low standards, as anything will beat using the postal system. No one is willing to grasp the opportunity to reform... it's too difficult, it'll take to long, nobody cares enough to change things, as long as the place is awash with petrodollars we can afford to live with inefficiencies (rather than take steps to invest in infrastructure, people). Crickey, this is turning into another rant.... deep breath, calm down... So, what do I suggest. Don't settle for poor quality services. Lobby Government. Publicise the problems. Educate the wider public. Take whatever action you can - don't lie down and accept that change can't happen. Sure, we're talking about the complex changing of people's mindsets and attitudes, but we have to start somewhere.

Actually this reminds me of another failed state in the former Soviet Union I had the pleasure of living in - Uzbekistan. The telephone system was so crap, that when the market opened up around the same time as an alternative technology became available, mobile telephony (at extortionate rates to the consumer) took off. I doubt whether they've invested much in their fixed line telephone since. I do know that the country has continued to sink in the economic mire of institutionalised corruption fed by a despotic regime. But that is another story.

The big advantage here in Kuwait is that you do have a tradition of a ruling political class that listens to its people. It's just that implementation is the tricky part and most of the energy is going into rhetoric, and playing of political games, rather acts of service to the country. But, hey, that seems to happen everywhere in the world. Depressing.

6.12.04

Is there danger from depleted uranium in Kuwait?

Yesterday we headed to the “tank graveyard” at Um Al Kwaty. This is in a restricted area where the remains of several thousand Iraqi tanks, weapons and other destroyed vehicles have been dumped or parked up after the 1991 war.

It’s almost a year since our last visit and this time there are a number of “no photography” signs around… as the light wasn’t that great I didn’t take any photos this time out anyway. Trying to stop the kids climbing over the tanks and trying to find munitions was difficult – how can you explain depleted uranium (DU) to kids, other than stop them going there in the first place. After this trip I thought I better get more informed about the dangers of DU and in particular the danger from all the destroyed tanks and other vehicles at the site. Was I being overcautious, or should I really be worried about radioactive contamination and its effects on myself and the kids.

Good on google for helping me find the IAEA’s report on DU levels in Kuwait. In summary, for most of Kuwait there is no real danger from DU contamination, unless you have long term skin exposure to DU fragments or munitions. However, the 1.5t of DU in the Um Al Kwaty area and the 105 tanks contaminated with DU would indicate that you shouldn’t really be touching this stuff! The report mentions segregating the contaminated tanks off from the rest and burying them… I’m not sure whether this has happened or not.

15.11.04

Summer's over

You know it’s the end of summer when:

  • I don’t even bother to put the sun shade in the car window any more. The metal inside no longer gets hot enough to burn your skin.
  • We can wait outside for the hour between school pick ups.
  • We had a picnic in the park last week.
  • The water parks have closed (mind you the temperatures were still in the 40’s when they closed, but that’s a Govt. tourism enterprise for you).
  • The gardens are springing into life. We have grass outside our place now, and all the usual annuals such as marigolds, petunias, pinks, …
  • The kids have to be in winter uniform at school next week!
  • We went to a fashion parade last month and they were modeling winter clothes.
  • We tell the 3 year old to guess numbers that start with 2 (sometimes 3) when we pass the temperature tower. Not numbers that start with 4. (There’s a building we pass on the way home that has the temperature displayed on it. As we approach everyone in the family guesses a number and we see who is closest.)
  • The fact that it’s getting dark now just after 5pm.

Funny how, given the overcast days and the fact that the temperatures are dropping everyone is thinking of winter approaching. Those who have been here for the summer will probably wear winter clothes, just for the variation.

11.11.04

Influx of expats in Kuwait... well someone has to do the work!

For those interested in the population make-up in Kuwait…

Expat influx cuts Kuwaiti count; Asians outnumber all foreigners: study

KUWAIT CITY (Agencies): Kuwait's population rose 6.5 per cent to 2.645 million in the first half of this year, from 2.484 million at the end of 2003, the planning ministry said Tuesday. The Kuwaitis' share of the population dropped from 36.8 per cent at the end of 2003 - the year of the US-led invasion of Iraq that rocked the region - to 35.7 per cent by mid-2004, it said, quoted by the state news agency KUNA. Expatriates made up 1.7 million of the total population on June 30, an 8.2 per cent increase on 1.571 million at the end of last year. In 2003, foreigners rose 6.2 per cent from 1.479 million in 2002.

Asians, who number 987,000, made up 37.3 per cent of the total population and 58 per cent of all expatriates in Kuwait. Many of them work as maids and in menial jobs. Europeans numbered 9,000, Americans 12,000 and Australians some 1,000.
Africans totalled only 3,000. Illegal residents are estimated to be around 108,000 people. There are 581,782 Arab nationals in Kuwait, 405,000 of which are males. As to the workforce during the same period, the report said there are 1,551,000 people working, 1,160,000 of which are males. Kuwaiti workforce
totaled at 291,000 with 176,000 males while non-Kuwaiti workforce was 81 per cent reaching 1,261,984 people. Non-Arab workforce was at 907,000 with the Asian community having the lion's share. The European workforce was at 5,000 while the
Americans are at 6,000 followed by the Australians with 538.

Well thanks to John Howard’s unstinting support for the Bush regime, Aussies seem to be punching above their weight in world publicity-terms, and are now even given prominence in Kuwait’s population statistics. So there’s now about 1,000 Australians in Kuwait – I wouldn’t be surprised if half of them are kiwis! (we don’t really mind that our Aussie neighbours get all the attention, … no really).

But what's really astounding is that Kuwaiti's only make up 18.7% of Kuwait's workforce... and if you dig deeper you'll find that 90-95% of Kuwaitis draw a Government salary. Yet, my private sector employer has a Kuwaitisation target of 59% rising to 65% in 2007... and so with unrealistic targets, guess what happens.

Aaaagh... Eid at last

There so much good material to write about and yet there is so little time… maybe the Eid holidays will provide a good opportunity to have a blogging splurge. We’ve a number of activities planned for these Eid holidays though, given that we have decided to stay at home, rather than join the estimated 20% of the population that are leaving Kuwait for a break. Actually, the subject of the Eid holiday itself is a bit of a laugh… what a crazy situation, where you don’t know which days are officially holidays until the last minute.

Figure this one out. My employer, following the Government’s dictat sent the following memo yesterday…

On the occasion of Eid Al Fitter (sic), xxx will be closed during the Eid Holiday as follows:

- If the first day of Eid coincides on Saturday 13/11/2004, the xxx will be closed till Monday 15/11/2004 and work will be resumed on Tuesday & Wednesday 16-17/11/2004. The xxx will be closed again on Thursday 18/11/2004.

- If the first day of Eid coincides on Sunday 14/11/2004, the xxx will be closed till Wednesday 17/11/2004, and work will be resumed on Thursday 18/11/2004.
So we could have 3 days off, or 4 days off, depending on whether it’s deemed that they’ve we’ve feasted fasted enough… let’s hope it’s cloudy on Friday night. But why a holiday on Thursday instead of Tuesday, if the first day of Eid is decided to be on Saturday instead of Sunday?

And because I’m too lazy to write too much about the peculiarities of Eid, I’ll let Mahmood explain more about it here.

It’s probably not widely known outside the Gulf, that if you’re caught breaking the dawn to dusk fasting law, i.e., no one is allowed to eat or drink during daylight hours, you could be punished by spending time in prison, before being fined & deported. Of course, each year some poor labourer from the sub-continet is caught and made an example of. The ones that suffer the most are of course those that have the most to lose, those labouring in the sun all day for a pittance. Wait until Ramadan occurs in the 50 degree heat of July or August...

And of course, for most secular muslims, Ramadan is a time of changing the body clock, feasting at night, and consequently putting on weight, being deprived of sleep, turning up to the office for a few hours, but don't expect any real work to be done… I guess this is what you get with a state religion rigidly enforced, originating from the dark ages and which can’t be changed as this would challenge the rationale of a whole way of life.

For what it's worth I think fasting is a good concept (and God recommends it), but fasting as I understand it is refraining from eating. During fasting you should continue to drink water to purify your body... it's just plain unhealthy to go without water all day! Fasting, as with prayer, should be a personal experience with God, or shared with other believers - not something mandated by the state, or a public spectacle which only goes to show outward piousness. It's what is on the inside that counts to God, not what's on the outside!

21.9.04

Too bad if you get caught up in an Auto accident

So now it seems as those all those minor bumps & scrapes that are part & parcel of owning a car in Kuwait are going to have to go unrepaired, until someone makes a good go at it and you feel it's worth the bureaucratic hassle of getting a police report & making an insurance claim. This in the Arab Times recently...
'Insists on police documents before repairing cars wrecked by accidents'

KUWAIT CITY: Deputy Premier and Interior Minister Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad was recently quoted as saying according to a decision issued earlier car mechanics and garages are forbidden from carrying out repairs on cars damaged by accidents unless such car owners produce documents issued to that effect by a police investigator or a police officer, reports Al-Watan daily. The decision also says vehicles involved in accidents outside the country should be proved by official documents issued by the country where the accident occurred and the same must be authenticated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs before the vehicle is sent for repairs.

What a scam. I try and avoid this type of institutionalised time-wasting as much as possible as I don't have the patience. Pity those that get bashed on a trip through Saudi... The same article goes on to say...
Meanwhile, Al-Anba daily said the General Traffic Department (GTD) carried out surprise inspections and issued citations to 411 garages for violating GTD rules and regulations. The daily also said the GTD collected KD 19 million from traffic violators and this year the figure is expected to reach KD 25 million. The daily added the GTD has collected KD 13 million until end June 2004.
So, quick back of a cigarette packet calculation... (bad metaphor, I don't smoke), that's KD10 (about $35) for every man, woman & child living in Kuwait. Given the number of actual drivers in Kuwait then it's more like KD25 each. If you have lots of wasta then you're probably not going to pay anything anyway, so that drives up the per capita contributions of those that probably can least afford to pay...

Given the amount of crazies on the road and the lack of action by police to stop them.... just a thought but, traffic violations are probably Kuwait's second largest income earner... and it has the potential to be so much more! So forget about encouraging Tourism or other ways of diversifying the economy away from its total dependence on oil... let's keep on employing Kuwaitis into the police force and get them out in those squad cars that are typically gathering dust in carparks. Let's really put Kuwait on the map as the highest per capita income earner from traffic violations... and we'll have the added bonus of cutting down on traffic related accidents and deaths!

Now if we can only deal with the Ministry of MisEducation and get agreement that all schools don't really need to start at the same time each morning, leading to traffic jams during the school run. Wishful thinking perhaps.


6.9.04

IKEA opening in Saudi

This story is a few days old now, but wow, talk about desperation. I know IKEA is popular, but the cheap pine furniture isn't worth dieing for...


Three die in Saudi shop stampede

IKEA employees carry an injured man out of the furniture shop. A stampede of hundreds of shoppers in western Saudi Arabia has left at least three people crushed to death.
A Saudi man and a Pakistani man were among those killed, officials in the port city of Jeddah said.
The incident occurred after shoppers rushed into a branch of Ikea to claim a limited number of credit vouchers being offered to the public...

...One shopper among the crowd said barriers had broken and security guards were unable to cope. He likened the scene to crowds at a rock concert and said he'd never seen anything similar in the country before...

Given that there are no rock concerts in Saudi, maybe an IKEA store opening is a good way of letting off steam after all.

Trapped & Hopeless in Kuwait

Just came across this article in the Kuwait Times.


By Muna Al-Fuzai: It happens every day somewhere in Kuwait. A 'cleaning worker' comes up to you, greeting you in a low voice and with a shy look, asking you to give him money. Now, you have to choose between contributing to the physical and psychological suffering this poor soul will endure in the event that you do not give him any money, or giving him a few fils, or a dinar or two. Yet, you know that he will have to collect more than you can give just to pay the KD 10 minimum demanded daily by the money collector who employs him...

I was unaware of this phenomenen in Kuwait, but it ain't surprising. As Muna says later in the article, hopefully publicity of this problem will help in leading "... concerned authorities to intervene and end this horrid practice, which is an affront to Islam and to Allah Himself." Rather than having an indigenous poverty issue, what makes Kuwait different to other societies is that here, the poor are imported to further exploit.

19.8.04

Small-time bribery & corruption

From Bahrain's Gulf Daily News, 18th August, comes this classic snippet of news.

Motorist jailed for bid to bribe inspector

MOTORIST has been jailed for a year for trying to bribe a vehicle inspector to declare his car fit for the road when it was not. The Indian man, aged 30, will be deported at the end of his sentence.

He denied the charge but was convicted by the Lower Criminal Court, where he was also found guilty of failing to transfer the ownership of the vehicle into his name.

The defendant was arrested at the General Directorate of Traffic vehicle inspection centre in May this year. He had taken his car in for another inspection after it was failed earlier because of several faults, the court heard. But he had not fixed the faults and instead tried to bribe the inspector with BD20 to clear it anyway.

The man, a cold store worker, told police that the inspector asked for BD20, which he thought was the inspection charge. He said he at first said he only had BD5, but when the inspector insisted, he gave him BD20.

But the inspector said the man followed him into his office and offered him money after he told him to come back when he had fixed the car. "He gave me BD5 and I did not reply to him," said the inspector. "Then he gave me BD10 and I told him BD20 and I would sign the paper. He put BD20 in my pocket and I immediately informed my superiors."


Hold on here, if a Vehicle Inspector asks for BD20 to sign the paper, isn't that asking for a bribe, ... surely there is an admission of guilt here by the Vehicle Inspector! If accurately reported, this is a good example of the way the legal system operates in Bahrain. Cynics might say that if the Vehicle Inspector was an ex-pat, and the motorist Bahraini, the outcome would be very different.

I guess this also shows how difficult it is to stamp out corruption when you have one person's word against another's.

Movie addict

Can a Kuwaiti reader help me understand what's with Ali Bebhehani? Is the Arab Times so desperate for Letters to the Editor that it prints everything Ali has to say about movies he’s watched? It's not even a review of movies... it's just ramblings about movies he's watched in the past. Given that the editor, Ahmed Jarallah seems to not be too afraid to print his or other musings on controversial topics, can’t he do better and print some of the other letters/emails he receives? Who’s paying who the favor here?

Talking movies, we’ve bought a stack of DVDs recently from Carrefour in Dubai and an ex-pat reducing their collection. I’m not usually one to see a film more than once, but buying is a lot more attractive these days with original DVDs (not the dubious copies easily available locally for KD2) more reasonable than going to a Kuwaiti cinema, with the added bonus that the film hasn’t been cut to pieces by the censor. For those unfamiliar with censorship in Kuwait, kissing & hugging or any outward indication of love is out, let alone sex scenes; whereas the more violence the better! Then there are some films like Fahrenheit 9/11 (offensive to Saudi royal family & our friends the American regime) or Passion of Christ that don’t have any sexual connotations but are banned altogether.

If you ever wanted to see what the rest of the world thinks of movies I just came across this
article in the NZ Herald which provides links to all the websites out there that provide movie reviews.

16.6.04

The perils of hashing in Kuwait

Forget about dodging the landmines, it seems that one of the hares has trouble evading eager locals whilst setting the run for the Hash. As reported in the Arab Times...

Woman detained: Police recently detained a Canadian woman for four hours for allegedly possessing heroin and released her after apologizing for their mistake, reports Al-Anba daily. Records indicate, the woman was arrested after an unidentified Kuwaiti man informed the Operations Department of the Interior Ministry that a blonde woman jogging along the main road in Riqqa had thrown some white powder every 50 metres.

The white powder in question is flour, which is used here to set the run. If you're unfamiliar with the running club with a drinking problem, you can find more info here.

An all-women industrial city?

Meanwhile in the Magic Kingdom, we hear that Saudi authorities are planning an all women industrial city…

Saudi plans women's city
Published: 13 June 2004, Gulf Daily News

RIYADH: Saudi authorities have approved the establishment of an all-women industrial city that will host training centres and employ approximately 10,000 women at more than 80 factories, the city's main investor said yesterday.
Hessa Aloun, who runs an investment company and is also a member of the Jeddah Chamber of Commerce, said that a Chinese and a Malaysian company have already signed agreements to start training programmes that will kick off in early 2005.
"I wanted to have a place where there would be training centres for women, next to factories and companies - a fully-fledged industrial city for women," said Aloun.
The city will be built about 10km from the centre of the Red Sea port city of Jeddah.

I'm all for equality of the sexes, but this is plainly a stupid idea. What is Aloun thinking of? Another large-scale sweatshop for Asian female labour? Surely, Aloun's not thinking that Saudi women want to, or will be allowed to, work?

Dame Silvia in Kuwait

Dame Silvia Cartwright (NZ's Governor General is the Queen's representative in NZ for those unfamiliar with NZ’s political set-up), was in Kuwait for 3 days after attending Reagan's funeral in Washington. Thankfully, I managed to get an invite to a reception at Bayan Palace to meet Dame Silvia. Very nice lady… My darling wife even made a point of filling Dame Silvia in on the fact that slavery is alive and kicking in Kuwait…, but I didn’t expect that this subject would make it into Dame Silvia’s subsequent speeches. She did get a write up in the local rag though.

Kuwait Times 15th June 2004
Cartwright praises Kuwaiti women

KUWAIT: Governor General of New Zealand, Silvia Cartwright, emphasised in two separate press interviews yesterday that Kuwaiti women are capable of playing their role in all domains. Interviewed by Al-Rai Al-Aam daily, Cartwright indicated that Kuwaiti women could occupy important ruling posts like the women in her country since Kuwaiti women are well-educated and are ready to fully participate in public affairs. She noted that the aim of her visit is to boost the distinctive friendly bilateral relations between Kuwait and New Zealand. She added that she had hoped to visit Kuwait for a long time. She also hopes that this visit will further develop bilateral relations. Cartwright praised the talks she held in Kuwait, saying they were very useful because they covered the trade exchange, what her country could offer the region and how New Zealand could cooperate with Kuwait in the future. Meanwhile, the New Zealand official told Al-Anbaa daily that her country hopes that peace and stability would be achieved in Iraq and that New Zealand asks for UN participation in spreading peace in Iraq. She pointed out that groups from New Zealand are carrying out humanitarian missions in Basra, like providing water and food although her country is not a member in the international coalition in Iraq. Cartwright clarified that New Zealand has a neutral stance towards the international disputes, such as the Israeli-Palestinian dispute. She praised and supported the international reform initiatives in the Middle East as they guarantee the democracy, hoping that the countries of the region seriously consider the reform.


So let's see if this message helps in a country where women don't have the opportunity to vote.

21.5.04

Kia ora from Kuwait Posted by Hello

Kia ora from Kuwait

Finally, I have got around to something I should have done a long time ago - a means to keep family and friends all around the world informed on what we're up to, and give them and others some of the daily fun and hassles of living in Kuwait. (And to tell it like it is).

Kuwait has got to be one of the weirdest places in the world. This is a country (or in effect one city) of 2.5 million where the rich/poor divide could not be more pronounced, and where the oil-induced riches have been able to pretty much corrupt a people in the space of a few decades. I know this is a gross generalization, and I know Kuwaitis that are educated and have lived in other parts of the world and see Kuwait for what it is - a pretty screwed up country - and wonder what can be done to change things for the better. Mostly though, educated Kuwaiti's resign themselves to the fate of their country, and using their material wealth, manage to escape for several months of the year to more pleasant places.

The institutionalised religion in these parts gives an outward appearance of piety, but there is an internal moral corruptness and the absolution of responsibility for external circumstances. (You could probably say the same thing about those from the West though). As my Muslim Palestinian colleague says to me in a taxi the other day after a rant about how screwed up Kuwait is (he has only recently come back, having lived here in its heyday, the 1980's, pre-Iraq invasion ... "You know, Kuwait and Saudi have the highest concentration of mosques per capita." I don't think he got the connection that I immediately made in my mind. Unfortunately, Kuwait and Saudi are not very good advertisements for Islam.