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Arabia
Begging ban exposes Saudi poverty
2003-11-03
Saudi authorities have launched a campaign against begging on the streets of the oil-rich kingdom. The minister of labour and social affairs was quoted on Monday by the Arab News daily as saying the ministry aimed to reduce the number of beggars by helping them find jobs and place the elderly in specialised centres. “Some people resort to begging just to make easy money without actually being in need. It’s a kind of disease,” said Ali al-Namlah.
Either that, or they might be suffering an acute shortage of groceries with no prospects of employment as middle managers. They don't do plumbing, y'know...
But Dr Saad al-Faqih, a London-based dissident, said that poverty in Saudi Arabia is an increasingly serious social problem. "Homelessness is part of poverty and when we say poverty we mean real poverty," he said. "People estimate at least 30% are living below the poverty line," added the head of the Movement for Islamic Reform.
Don't spend enough time and effort on jihad, huh?
Saudis are lining up at the royal palaces pleading for help, he said, adding the royal family is consuming 60-80% of the country's revenues.
Yet another oil-for-palaces program. Maybe oil-for-Monte Carlo...
"Their dignity prevents them from begging," he said. More and more Saudis are unable to meet their basic essentials. "They are unable to pay water bills. They are unable to pay electricity bills. Meals are hard to come by," said al-Faqih. "We're talking about major areas in the big cities." While there are no official figures, more than 12,000 beggars were arrested in Saudi Arabia in 1998 of which 9000 were foreign and expelled. Approximately 100,000 Saudis enter the workforce every year. Al-Faqih expressed doubt that Saudi Arabia's poverty crisis could be resolved as long as the House of Saud was ruling the country. "The manner of running the country does not provide enough room for change to create jobs and rid of corruption," he said, adding corruption is "endemic and the norm".
Posted by:Fred Pruitt

#4  'Saudis are lining up at the royal palaces pleading for help, he said, adding the royal family is consuming 60-80% of the country's revenues. "Their dignity prevents them from begging," he said.'

Sounds like the Royal Family should find real jobs instead of begging! Walmart is paying $8.00/hr for greeters..or did I misread that statement....oh my
Posted by: Frank G   2003-11-3 11:06:38 PM  

#3  
"Homelessness is part of poverty and when we say poverty we mean real poverty,"

As opposed to overweight / Color TV DVD / cell phone yakkin' / car ownin' American poverty.

If the bottom drops out for me, there's no place else I'd rather be than the good ol' USA.

I count my blessings. And they are worth protecting.
Posted by: Hyper   2003-11-3 10:28:35 PM  

#2  I hope they aren't pushing the beggars across teh border into Iraq. They couldn't be that depraved, could they?
Posted by: Super Hose   2003-11-3 9:31:36 PM  

#1  No doubt a lot of the national income is spent on the royals. But also a lot goes to the religious 'leaders', the religious police, training imans overseas, building mosques overseas, funding islamic 'charities', etc.

Of course, the royal family probably blames the poverty on Israel.
Posted by: mhw   2003-11-3 8:46:01 PM  

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