Bad Omen for Blood-Soaked Saudi Rulers
By Finian Cunningham
September 14, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Sputnik"
- Anyone inclined to believe in divine
retribution will find pause for thought over the latest calamity in
Saudi Arabia, where a giant crane smashed into its Grand Mosque over
the weekend, killing more than 100 pilgrims.
Worshippers were gathering in the top mosque at Mecca
for Friday evening prayers when one of the construction cranes
foresting the holy city toppled, crashing through the roof and
crushing hundreds of people below. Blood-splattered corpses lay
strewn across the floor of the mosque, as shell-shocked survivors
struggled to make sense of the freak disaster. Apparently, heavy
rain and gusts of wind had caused the metallic structure to keel
over.
The incident comes as nearly two million Muslims
from across the globe are due to gather in Mecca during the next two
weeks for the annual Hajj pilgrimage. Mecca — reputed to be the
birthplace of the Prophet Mohammed — is undergoing extensive
property development. Some critics have accused the Saudi
authorities of exploiting the unique spiritual status of the city
in order to make way for expensive apartments and hotels to generate
lucrative tourism profits.
Among the construction companies to have secured
juicy contracts are firms owned by the ruling House of Saud. There
are strong suspicions of cronyism and bribery plying the
construction boom in Mecca. This has in turn led to lax regulation
in safety standards and building controls. The use of cheap
unskilled labour from the Indian subcontinent is also a factor.
Mecca and the other Saudi
city Medina associated with the Prophet are considered the two
holiest Muslim sites on Earth. Saudi King Salman, as for his
predecessors, is referred to formally as "the custodian of the two
holiest sites of Islam", as well as being the sovereign leader
of Saudi Arabia.
Nevertheless, for many Muslims around the world,
the House of Saud is seen as a disgrace to Islam. In recent years,
the Saudi rulers are heavily implicated in sowing sectarian violence
between Sunni and Shia branches of the faithful across the entire
region. The House of Saud professes a fundamentalist version
of Sunni Islam known as Wahhabism, which views others Muslim sects
with disdain as somehow being "apostate" or "infidel".
The religious chauvinism of the Saudi rulers is
closely aligned with the extremist views and practices of sundry Al
Qaeda-linked terror groups, including the so-called Islamic State
network in Syria and Iraq. The Wahhabi condemnation of Shia Muslims
as "heretics", applied also to non-aligned Sunnis and Christians,
explains why these terror groups have persecuted such communities
with ruthless beheadings and other barbaric abuses.
But the link between the
Saudi rulers and the al-Qaeda-type extremistsis much more than an
abstract sharing of sectarian religious views.
The Saudi regime is known to have funnelled
billions of dollars and weapons into these terror networks
as proxies for pursuing its geopolitical schemes. Iran — seen as a
"heretic" Shia power — is the recurring bane of Saudi obsession.
Washington and the other Western powers, including
the Israeli regime, are fully supportive of the House of Saud and
the related Gulfmonarchies in Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the United
Arab Emirates and Oman. These family-run oil-rich entities are armed
to the teeth by theUS, Britain, France and Germany — making them
among the mostrepressive autocrats on earth.
The terror links of the Saudis and other Gulf Arab
dictators is not an impediment to Western alliance with these
despots. Far from it.
The evidence shows that the
Western powers — despite their bombastic claims of fighting
terrorism — have in fact colluded all the way with the Gulf
monarchies to use these same terror groups as proxies in their
shared geopolitical agenda of regime change in the Middle East.
Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov this weekend
put his finger onthe telling contradiction of Western policy in the
Middle East. Lavrov was defending Russia's recent stepping up of
military aid to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad. The Syrian
national army is the strongest, most effective opposing force to the
Islamic State and other terror groups, said Lavrov. So, logically,
he added, if Western countries claim to be trying to defeat such
terror networks, then they should be supporting the Syrian
government, not undermining it. Of course, the answer to that
contradiction is that the Western powers and their Saudi and Gulf
allies are not at all interested in defeating the terror groups.
They are only interested in regime change and have infact been
responsible for unleashing the terror phenomenon for that very
purpose.
The same criminal conspiracy is seen to even
greater extent in Yemen.For the past six months, the Arabian
Peninsula country has been bombed on a daily basis by a so-called
coalition headed up by Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf despots.
America and Britain are supplying the warplanes and munitions,
as well as aerial coordination, for this war of aggression.
The Western-Arab military
intervention has no mandate from the UN Security Council.
The only "mandate" it has is from their deposed
and discredited former puppet president Mansour Hadi.
Fighting on the same side as the Western-Arab aerial
coalition in Yemen are the al-Qaeda-linked terror networks. The
shared aim is to defeat a popular Yemeni uprising, led by the Houthi
rebels. If the popular uprising, which emerged in Yemen as early
as 2011 and which ousted the Western-Saudi-backed Hadi regime
earlier this year, were to succeed, then this democratic outcome
would threaten the status quo of the Arab dictatorships across the
region. This despotism is the cornerstone for Western hegemony
in the oil-rich strategic enclave, and that is why Yemen is being
pounded mercilessly.In targeting Yemen, the
Western-Saudi coalition has spared no-one and nothing. Residential
homes, hospitals, schools, water and power utilities, markets and
mosques have been bombed, with a civilian death toll well
over 5,000. Even humanitarian aid convoys have been hit. The head
of the UN's High Commission for Refugees, Antoine Grand, told the
BBC that two of his staff were killed last week in a "deliberate"
Saudi air strike on their convoy.
Over the weekend, 10 Yemeni civilians were
reportedly killed when a village in the southern province of Taiz
was bombed by Saudi warplanes. Meanwhile, in the capital Sanaa
innumerable casualties were feared after dozens of poor residential
neighbourhoods were hit by airstrikes.
This carnage of crimes against humanity —
inflicted largely within ternational silence and certainly a
shameful muteness from the UN secretary general Ban Ki Moon — is
against the horrendous backdrop of nearly half of Yemen's 24 million
population facing starvation because of a sea and air blockade
imposed on the country by the Western-Saudi-led coalition.
This is nothing short
of genocide — committed against the poorest Muslim nation in the
Arab region.
But never mind. Let's cut to a "prayer-break".
Perversely, the House of Saud — the self-declared custodian
of Islamic sanctities — dares at the same time to host the annual
Hajj pilgrimage. If the latter ritualis supposed to offer thanks and
obedience to the Almighty, the sickening audacity is surely tempting
fate.
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