Author: Siddharth Varadarajan
Publication: The Times of India
Date: January 25, 2003
Hussein Al-Athel, secretary-general
of the Riyadh Chambers of Commerce and Industry, has visited the US every
year since Last year, like thousands of other influential Saudi citizens,
he decided not to. "Why should I take the risk of being accused of some
wrongdoing? They may even misunderstand my name.
A tribal name like many of the 9/11
hijackers had can be shared by up to 250,000 Saudis, and then there are
thousands of Alis and Mohammeds," he said.
"There is a feeling here of not
wanting to always prove you're innocent."
A suspicious' name or the whim of
the immigration authorities can lead to a Saudi visitor at a US airport
being fingerprinted and photographed on arrival. "It's really quite random",
said a Saudi businessman.
"One prince that I know sailed through
immigration. Another was taken aside and photographed like a criminal."
With 15 of the 19 hijackers hailing
from Saudi Arabia, the Bush administration seems keen to place obstacles
in the way of Saudis visiting the US.
It put pressure on Canada to end
its visa free entry for Saudi citizens and even got its southern neighbour,
Mexico, to shut down its embassy in August 2002.
So obsessed is Washington with the
idea that Al Qaida works on tribal lines that it has introduced a form
where visa seekers must spell out the full details of their family, clan
and tribal affiliations.
"For us Saudis, that can be complicated,"
joked Farooq Luqman, editor of the Jeddah-based daily, Malayalam News,
and an Indophile of long standing. "It's much better to just be a Malhotra!"
A senior Saudi official who asked
not to be named said Washington's response to 9/11 has undermined an alliance
that provided stability to the entire region.
"We have had a long relationship
with the US for so many years and look how they treat us now," he said.
Wallahi (By Pod), I will never visit the US again unless I am required
to do so for my work," the editor of a top-circulating Arabic daily declared
at a dinner in a smart restaurant on Jeddah's corniche. "We have all studied
in the US and loved that country. But this is the feeling we have today."
"The way the US is treating Saudis
shows that civilised, democratic values are not deep-rooted there," a businessman
said. "Once they are finished with the foreigners, they will start targeting
their own people".