Booze, dope, prostitutes, disco: it's party time in Saudi Arabia

    From: AP
    December 11, 2010 12:00AM

   
THE DJ had the dance floor rocking. The bartender served up a special vodka 
punch. The host was a prince - complete with his own entourage.

An A-list LA party? Fashion week in Paris?

Try Saudi Arabia, home of roving Islamic morality police enforcing the most 
austere codes in the Middle East.

That's the insider account by a US diplomat, whose night on the town in the Red 
Sea city of Jeddah (mission: to observe "social interaction" of rich Saudi 
youth) was summarised in a confidential memo released this week by WikiLeaks.

"The underground nightlife of Jeddah's elite youth is thriving and throbbing," 
the memo said. "The full range of worldly temptations and vices are available - 
alcohol, drugs, sex - but all behind closed doors."

Wait, this is Saudi Arabia they are talking about? The place where women are 
banned from driving and can be jailed for socialising with men outside their 
family? The land whose brand of Islam, known as Wahabism, is perhaps best known 
in the West for beheadings and its role as sombre guardian for the holy 
pilgrimage cities of Mecca and Medina?
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The US cable touches on a basic lesson for understanding the region: public 
mores and private passions can be very far apart.

Wild parties rage behind closed doors in Tehran even as Iran's hardliners 
tighten their grip.

Conservative Gulf sheiks make sure their wine cellars are well stocked.

Outside Saudi Arabia, it's not unusual to see a traveller from the desert 
kingdom hunkered down at an airport bar or letting loose in Bahrain.

"What one quickly realises about the Middle East is that there are layers upon 
layers in society," said Salman Shaikh, director of the Brookings Doha Centre 
in Qatar.

But he does not believe Saudi officials will face much fallout from the 
disclosure.

"It's really not in anyone's interest to call attention to these deals or try 
to tear them up," he said.

The US diplomat who wrote the cable in January last year added just enough 
flourish to give the invitation to a Halloween party an intrepid feel.

It's a look, he wrote, "behind the facade of Wahabi conservatism in the 
streets".

It began by clearing the prince's security detail. Next up was a coat-check 
area where women pull off their head-to-toe black abayas.

Inside, Filipino bartenders served up a cocktail punch using moonshine vodka.

A US "energy drink company" - whose name is blacked out on the WikiLeaks 
release - helped bankroll the bash that included, the diplomat was told, some 
prostitutes mingling in the crowd.

"The scene resembled a nightclub anywhere outside the kingdom: plentiful 
alcohol, young couples dancing, a DJ at the turntables and everyone in 
costume," the message continued.

"Saudi youth get to enjoy relative social freedom and indulge fleshly 
pursuits," the cable said, "but only behind closed doors - and only the rich."

AP



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