Riyadh // When Saudi Arabia announced a programme to provide people with affordable homes last month, only a few hours passed before critism of the Housing Ministry began online.
A man wrote on Twitter that the agency “is all promises but we have yet to see them implement anything.” Another said the ministry should solve problems with previous projects before starting new ones. The ministry defended its plan the same day, in a rare government response to public discontent in an absolute monarchy.
Saudis, with the world’s largest proportion of people using Twitter, are turning online to avoid the censorship of traditional media, and to question government in a way that’s transforming their relationship with the ruling Al Saud family.
“Social media provides a space for interaction that isn’t permitted in public,” said Lori Plotkin Boghardt, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, who follows social media trends in Saudi Arabia and Gulf politics. “Saudi leadership views the use of social media to express discontent as a fact of modern life that must be tolerated. Not allowing it might lead to further disgruntlement.”
A third of Saudi internet users access Twitter each month, the largest proportion in the world, according to data from PeerReach. YouTube and Instagram are the other two most popular social media sites in the kingdom.
The increase in online media use is being supported by economic growth of 3.6 per cent last year, employment initiatives and by a population structure where a majority of the 30 million people in the country are under the age of 30.
King Abdullah, who was born in 1924, raised the minimum wage for Saudi workers and increased spending to ward off the political unrest that has swept through other Arab countries. He allocated record funds to build roads, airports and industrial centres to reduce the country’s oil dependency.
Internet penetration reached 55 per cent of the population at the end of the first half of last year, according to data from the country’s telecoms regulator.
Saudi online debates are in sharp contrast to the conformity of many elements of life in a conservative Islamic society.
The subtle shift in attitudes has led to a conservative backlash.
Grand mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al Asheikh warned in November against any attempts to spread propaganda through social media. He described it as a platform for “malice that promotes misleading doctrines.”
The government is in a “delicate” balancing act, said Fahad Nazer, a political analyst at Vienna, Virginia-based JTG, and a former analyst for the Saudi embassy in Washington. “While they have allowed these necessities of modern life, they are also sensitive to the concerns of conservatives.”
For the Saudi Interior Ministry, fighting Al Qaeda is a greater priority than stopping people from expressing themselves.
“Our focus is radical ideology,” said Abdulrahman Al Hadlaq, head of the interior ministry’s ideological security department. “If they aren’t calling for violence or illegal activities, we don’t bother them.”
* Bloomberg
