LGBTQ emerges as a litmus test for limits of Saudi reforms
By James M.
Dorsey
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Saudi Arabia has turned LGBTQ rights into a litmus test
for the limits of social reforms by sending mixed messages.
In line with broad-based official and popular rejection of
gender diversity and fluidity in the kingdom and across the Muslim World, the
Saudi General Commission for Audiovisual Media this week announced that a
new, highly-acclaimed Spider-Man movie would not be shown in the country's
cinemas.
The United
Arab Emirates also removed ‘Spider-Man: Across the
Spider-Verse,’ from
its release schedule. The decision called into question a UAE announcement in
2021 that it ended cinematic censorship.
Like Saudi
Arabia, the UAE banned Lightyear, a Disney and Pixar animated
production last year, because of a same-sex kiss scene. It also barred Disney's
Doctor Strange in the Universe of Madness, in which one character refers to her
"two mums."
Also last
year, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) accused the US streaming giant Netflix
of showing content that “contradicts Islamic values.” The GCC groups Saudi Arabia, the
UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, and Bahrain.
The Saudi decision
to ban the sequel to the 2018 film ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse,’ takes
on added significance because it follows a startling announcement six weeks
earlier by the Saudi Tourism Authority that LGBTQ tourists would be welcome in the kingdom.
“We don’t
ask anyone to disclose personal details and never have. Everyone is welcome to
visit our country,” the authority said in its tourism website's Frequently
Asked Questions section.
Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman has made tourism a pillar of his Vision 2030 plan to
turn Saudi Arabia into a cutting-edge 21st-century state, diversify
the kingdom's economy, and reduce its dependence on oil exports.
A schedule of penalties for
violations of public decency published by the tourism website lists fines rather than the
far harsher consequences on Saudi legal books for ‘indecent behaviour,
including acts of a sexual nature” and the wearing of “improper clothing,“
including garb with “obscene images or symbols.”
Saudi
Arabia’s Sharia-based code criminalises same-sex sexual activity
and transgender expression. Although not applied recently, the law provides maximum death penalties.
Saudi
authorities last year conducted “rainbow raids” on shops selling children’s toys and
accessories.
Authorities
targeted clothing and toys, including hair clips, pop-its, t-shirts, bows,
skirts, hats, and colouring pencils "that contradict the Islamic faith and
public morals and promote homosexual colours that target the younger
generation," a commerce ministry official said at the time.
The Saudi
cinema authority made no explicit mention of LGBTQ content in its banning of
the Spider-Man movie that contains brief references to transgender children.
It asserted
that the film “contradicts content controls.” The authority said, "the
decision will remain in place unless the production companies commit to
implementing the required amendments.”
The various
incidents suggest that the announcement welcoming non-Saudi LGBTQ tourists did
not signify a change in domestic policies or herald a reform of laws regarding
gender diversity and fluidity.
The
announcement further suggested that Mr. Bin Salman did not find it necessary to
consider presumed public sentiment. While there are no polls on LGBTQ rights,
it is fair to assume that a significant segment of the Saudi population would
oppose more flexible policies toward LGBTQ.
Mr. Bin
Salman’s harsh repression of freedom of expression and dissent makes it
difficult, if not impossible, to gauge public opinion.
Some analysts
argue that the announcement welcoming LGBTQ tourists was little more than a
public relations ploy to preempt pressure from US Secretary of State Antony
Blinken during last week’s visit to Saudi Arabia.
The
announcement potentially also strengthens a possible Saudi bid to host the 2030
World Cup.
“The tourism
announcement will play well in the United States,” one analyst said.
Even so,
without legs, the announcement, rather than serving as an indication of Saudi
intent, could ultimately be seen as yet another sign that Saudi willingness to
appease the Biden administration and the kingdom's critics in the US Congress
is, at best half-hearted.
Saudi Arabia
could have earned brownie points at no cost had it lifted, before or during Mr.
Blinken's visit, travel bans on three dual US-Saudi nationals, including a
72-year-old imprisoned for tweets critical of the kingdom.
Sentenced
this year to 19 years in prison for posting criticism of the government on
Twitter when he was in Florida, Saad Ibrahim Almadi was released in March but
forbidden to leave the kingdom.
Last year,
Mr. Blinken insisted at a first-ever State Department briefing for LGBTQI
reporters that “we have real engagement” on LGBTQ issues with Saudi Foreign
Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud.
Mr. Blinken
said he raises the issue “invariably, in every conversation” with his Saudi
counterpart.
Mr. Bin
Farhan appeared dismissive during Mr. Blinken’s visit.
"We are
always open to having a dialogue with our friends, but we don’t respond to pressure. When we do anything, we do it in
our own interests," Mr. Bin Farhan said.
Taken
together, Mr. Bin Farhan's comment and the kingdom's recent track record
suggest the banning of the Spider-Man movie rather than the announcement
regarding LGBTQ tourists signals the essence of Saudi policy. The message is
that policy changes are, at best marginal.
Thank you for joining me today. I hope you enjoyed today’s column and
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Dr. James M.
Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at
Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M.
Dorsey.
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