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Israel strike on Syria wounds two civilians — ministry

By - Jul 02,2022 - Last updated at Jul 02,2022

DAMASCUS — An Israeli air strike wounded two civilians on Saturday in the Syrian government’s heartland on the war-torn country’s west coast, the defence ministry said.

“The Israeli enemy carried out an air strike” after daybreak near the town of Al Hamidiyah, the ministry said, identifying the locations hit as poultry farms, without elaborating.

The strike was conducted from the Mediterranean Sea, west of Lebanon’s northern city of Tripoli, and “led to the injury of two civilians, including a woman”, it said in a statement.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said the facility that was struck had formerly been used to keep farm animals but was now used by Lebanon’s Shiite militant movement Hizbollah, a Syrian government ally.

The Israeli army told AFP on Saturday that they “do not comment on reports in the foreign media”.

Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian of Iran, also a staunch ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad, condemned the Israeli strike.

“With its attacks, the Zionist entity is trying to portray Damascus as an unsafe city to obstruct the return of displaced Syrians,” he said on Saturday during a visit to the Syrian capital.

Video footage by Syrian’s official news agency SANA showed rubble at what it said was the site of the targeted facility.

People are seen inspecting the site, where pulverised chunks of concrete and iron lay on the earth in the middle of a field.

Al Hamidiyah is located south of Tartus, a bastion of the Syrian government and home to a naval port used by Russia, whose armed forces have backed Assad.

Since civil war broke out in Syria in 2011, Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes against its northern neighbour.

The raids have targeted Syrian government troops as well as allied Iran-backed forces and Hizbollah fighters.

Observatory Director Rami Abdel Rahman said Saturday’s strike targeted “warehouses formerly used to raise animals, and which the Lebanese Hizbollah group was using to transport weapons”.

Syrian air defence systems did not appear to have been deployed, said the British-based monitor, which has a wide network of sources in Syria.

Last month Israeli strikes on Damascus International Airport rendered its runways unusable for weeks.

Besides the extensive damage caused to civilian and military runways, the monitor said the strikes had targeted nearby warehouses used as weapons depots by Iran and Hizbollah.

The Syrian war has claimed the lives of nearly half-a-million people and forced around half of the country’s pre-war population from their homes.

 

Israel parliament dissolves, sets fifth election in less than four years

By - Jun 30,2022 - Last updated at Jun 30,2022

Israeli Minister of Foreign Affairs Yair Lapid (left) and outgoing Prime Minister Naftali Bennett attend a meeting at the Knesset on Thursday (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israeli lawmakers dissolved parliament on Thursday, forcing the country's fifth election in less than four years, with Foreign Minister Yair Lapid set to take over as caretaker prime minister at midnight.

After the unanimous 92-0 vote, the centrist Lapid embraced outgoing Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, whose year in charge of an unwieldy, eight-party coalition was ultimately undone by its ideological divisions.

Lapid, whose Hungarian-born father survived the Holocaust, went immediately from parliament to Jerusalem's Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial centre.

"There, I promised my late father that I will always keep Israel strong and capable of defending itself and protecting its children," the 58-year-old said in a statement.

The newly-called election, set for November 1, marks another sign that Israel remains mired in an unprecedented era of political gridlock, with early opinion polls indicating the results may again be inconclusive.

The religious nationalist Bennett, who has said he was stepping back from politics, hosted Lapid for a short transition ceremony.

"I hand over to you the responsibility for the State of Israel," Bennett said to Lapid, who called the outgoing premier "a good man and an excellent prime minister".

"This is not a farewell ceremony because [I have] no intention to take leave of you," Lapid further said.

Hawkish former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has assured that he and his allies — extreme-right nationalists and ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties — will finally rally a majority, following what he described on Thursday as a "failed [coalition] experiment".

"We are the only alternative. A strong, nationalist, responsible government," said Netanyahu, who is on trial over corruption charges he denies.

 

'Deeply polarised' 

 

Regarded by both allies and critics as a tireless political brawler, Netanyahu was already campaigning on Thursday, telling shoppers at a Jerusalem mall that combatting rising living costs — which he blamed on Bennett's "bad government" — will be his "first mission" after returning to office.

Lapid meanwhile held talks with President Isaac Herzog, who said Israelis being sent back to the polls for a fifth time since April 2019 was "very unhealthy for the country", while praising Lapid's "considerable political skill".

For Yonahan Plesner, president of the Israel Democracy Institute think tank, yet another general election highlights Israel's "deeply polarised reality".

The only solution to such “dysfunction”, he said, were “long-over-due electoral and constitutional reforms”.

The November vote will in part be a contest between Netanyahu and Lapid, a former TV news anchor and celebrity who has surprised many since being dismissed as a lightweight when he entered politics a decade ago.

Lapid was the architect of the Bennett-led motley alliance that took office in June 2021, ending Netanyahu’s record 12 consecutive years in power and passing Israel’s first state budget since 2018.

Bennett led a coalition of right-wingers, centrists, doves and Islamists from the Raam faction, which made history by becoming the first Arab party to support an Israeli government since the Israel’s in 1948.

Raam Party chief Mansour Abbas faced backlash from some Arabs, but on Thursday defended his decision to take part in Israeli governance.

“We succeeded in pushing ourselves as a political force,” Abbas said.

He added that Raam would continue advocating for Arab society, making sure that issues like poor living conditions for his Bedouin constituents were “on the table rather than underneath it”.

 

Iran policy 

 

The coalition came apart last week after some Arab lawmakers refused to renew a measure that ensures Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank live under Israeli law. Palestinians in the territory are subject to Israeli military rule.

For Bennett, a staunch supporter of settlements, allowing the so-called West Bank law to expire was intolerable. Dissolving parliament before its June 30 expiration temporarily renews the measure.

He will stay on as alternate prime minister responsible for Iran policy, as world powers take steps to revive stalled talks on the Islamic republic’s nuclear programme.

Israel opposes a restoration of the 2015 agreement that gave its arch foe sanctions relief in exchange for limits on its nuclear programme.

Lapid will retain his foreign minister title while serving as Israel’s 14th premier. He will find himself under an early scrutiny, with US President Joe Biden due in Jerusalem in two weeks.

Talks at UN fail to resolve Libya elections stalemate

By - Jun 30,2022 - Last updated at Jun 30,2022

From centre to left and right: Speaker of Libyan House of Representatives Aguila Saleh, United Nations Special Adviser on Libya Stephanie Williams and President of Libya's High State Council of State Khaled Al Mishri give a press conference after a high-level meeting on Libya Constitutional track at the United Nations in Geneva, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

GENEVA — Talks between rival Libyan institutions aimed at breaking the deadlock over the rules for long-awaited elections failed to resolve key differences, the United Nations said on Thursday.

Parliament speaker Aguila Saleh and President of the High Council of State Khaled Al Mishri met at the UN in Geneva for three days of talks to discuss the draft constitutional framework for elections.

But while some progress was made, it was not enough to move forward towards national polls, with the two sides still at odds over who can stand in presidential elections, said the UN's top Libya envoy Stephanie Williams, who facilitated the talks.

Presidential and parliamentary elections, originally set for December last year, were meant to cap a UN-led peace process following the end of the last major round of violence in 2020.

But the vote never took place due to several contentious candidacies and deep disagreements, over the polls' legal basis, between rival power centres in the east and west of the country.

A week of talks earlier this month in Cairo between the Tripoli-based High Council and Saleh’s eastern-based House of Representatives (HoR), aimed at agreeing on a constitutional basis for a vote, ended without a breakthrough.

Williams said that following the talks in Geneva and Cairo, several points had been agreed.

 

‘Disagreement persists’ 

 

They included the designation of the headquarters and distribution of seats for both chambers, and the division of responsibilities between the president, prime minister, cabinet and local government.

They have also reached consensus on decentralisation, including the number of governorates and their powers; revenue allocation mechanisms for the different levels of government; and increased representation for cultural components, said Williams.

“Disagreement persists on the eligibility requirements for the candidates in the first presidential elections,” she said in a statement.

“While the progress secured during three rounds of consultations in Cairo and this round in Geneva is significant, it remains insufficient as a basis to move forward towards comprehensive national elections.”

Libya has been split between a Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli, and the eastern-based HoR, backed by military leader Khalifa Haftar.

According to Libyan media, the spat over presidential candidate eligibility relates to whether dual nationals can stand; Haftar holds US nationality.

 

‘Calm and stability’ 

 

“I urge the two chambers to overcome the pending disagreement as soon as possible,” said Williams, urging “calm and stability”.

She said the UN would remain available to help reach an agreement to end the country’s long transition period.

Williams said she would present recommendations on alternative ways forward to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

The prospect of elections appears as distant as ever since the HoR, elected in 2014, appointed a rival government to replace that of interim prime minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah, arguing that his mandate has expired.

After failing to enter Tripoli in an armed stand-off in May, the rival administration has taken up office further east in Sirte.

Sirte is the hometown of Muammar Qadhafi, whose overthrow in a NATO-backed revolt in 2011 plunged the country into years of chaos and violence.

Recent weeks have seen repeated skirmishes between armed groups in Tripoli, prompting fears of a return to full-scale conflict.

 

Four Sudan protesters killed in mass rallies against army rule

By - Jun 30,2022 - Last updated at Jun 30,2022

KHARTOUM — At least four Sudanese demonstrators were killed on  Thursday as the security forces sought to quash mass rallies of protesters demanding an end to military rule, pro-democracy medics reported.

AFP correspondents reported security forces firing tear gas and stun grenades to disperse tens of thousands of protesters, the latest crackdown on the anti-coup movement in the past eight months.

At least two of the four were shot dead by "bullets to the chest", the medics said, reporting a total death toll of 105 from months of protest-related violence.

"Even if we die, the military will not rule us," protesters chanted, urging the reversal of an October military coup by army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, that prompted foreign governments to slash aid, deepening a chronic economic crisis.

"Down with Burhan's rule," others chanted, with protests and violence flaring in both the capital Khartoum and its suburbs, including the twin city of Omdurman.

The medics had previously reported one demonstrator was shot dead on Wednesday during small-scale protests in the run-up to the main rallies.

An AFP correspondent said Internet and phone lines had been disrupted since the early hours of Thursday, a measure the Sudanese authorities often impose to prevent mass gatherings.

Security was tight in Khartoum despite the recent lifting of a state of emergency imposed after the coup.

Troops and police blocked off roads leading to both army headquarters and the presidential palace, witnesses said. Shops around the capital were largely shuttered.

Activists have been calling for "million-strong" rallies.

 

'Violence needs to end' 

 

UN special representative Volker Perthes said on Thursday that "violence needs to end", while the US embassy in Khartoum urged restraint and "the protection of civilians so that no more lives are lost".

Sudan's foreign ministry has repeatedly criticised the UN envoy's comments, saying they were built on "assumptions" and "contradict his role as facilitator" in troubled talks on ending Sudan's political crisis.

The latest protests come on the anniversary of a previous coup in 1989, that toppled the country’s last elected civilian government and ushered in three decades of iron-fisted rule by Islamist-backed general Omar Bashir.

They also come on the anniversary of 2019 protests demanding that the generals, who had ousted Bashir in a palace coup earlier that year, cede power to civilians.

Those protests led to the formation of the mixed civilian-military transitional government which was toppled in last year’s coup.

Sudan has been roiled by near-weekly protests as the country’s economic woes have deepened since Burhan seized power last year.

“June 30 is our way to bring down the coup and block the path of any fake alternatives,” said the Forces for Freedom and Change, an alliance of civilian groups whose leaders were ousted in the coup.

Alongside the African Union and east African bloc IGAD, the United Nations has been attempting to broker talks between the generals and civilians, but they have been boycotted by all the main civilian factions.

The UN has warned that the deepening economic and political crisis has pushed one third of the country’s population of more than 40 million towards life-threatening food shortages.

 

Syria joins Russia in recognising Ukraine separatist republics

In 2018, Syria recognised South Ossetia, Abkhazia

By - Jun 29,2022 - Last updated at Jun 29,2022

Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with Syrian President Bashar Assad at the Kremlin in Moscow on September 13, 2021 (AFP photo)

DAMASCUS — Moscow ally Syria on Wednesday recognised the independence of eastern Ukraine's two separatist republics, making it the first state other than Russia to do so.

The breakaway states of Donetsk and Lugansk, whose independence Moscow recognised in February, are situated in the Donbas region at the centre of Russia's invasion and have escaped Kyiv's control since 2014.

"The Syrian Arab Republic has decided to recognise the independence and sovereignty of both the Lugansk People's Republic and the Donetsk People's Republic," a source at Syria's foreign ministry told the official SANA news agency.

"We will communicate with both countries to agree on frameworks for strengthening relations, including establishing diplomatic relations in accordance with established rules," the source said.

Earlier this month, Syrian President Bashar Assad met with a Russian delegation and representatives of the Donetsk republic.

During the meeting he said Damascus was ready to start political relations with Donetsk.

This is not the first time that the Syrian government, which since 2015 has been heavily backed by Russia in its own civil war, has supported Moscow's recognition of breakaway states.

In 2018, Syria recognised South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent from the former Soviet state of Georgia, prompting Tbilisi to cut diplomatic ties.

Abkhazia and South Ossetia are internationally recognised as part of Georgia, which gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, but Russia and a handful of other countries recognise their independence.

Iran says talks with US 'serious' as clock ticks on nuclear deal

By - Jun 29,2022 - Last updated at Jun 29,2022

This handout photo provided by the Iranian news agency IRNA on Tuesday shows Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani( right) meeting with the European Union's nuclear talks coordinator Enrique Mora in Qatar's capital Doha (AFP photo)

DOHA — Iran said it was "serious" about nuclear talks with the United States but that negotiations could end after just two days on Wednesday, as they try to revive a landmark deal.

The indirect negotiations in Qatar are an attempt to reboot long-running European Union-mediated talks on a return to the 2015 nuclear agreement between Tehran and world powers.

Iran's chief negotiator Ali Bagheri is set to meet the talks' coordinator, EU deputy secretary general Enrique Mora, on the evening of day two in Qatar.

"The two-day talks are not over yet and this evening another meeting will be held between" Bagheri and Mora, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said in Tehran.

"The talks in Doha, which are taking place in a professional and serious atmosphere, were scheduled for two days from the beginning," Kanani said.

No time-limit had previously been announced on the talks, which are taking place in a Doha hotel with a US delegation headed by special envoy Robert Malley.

An EU source told AFP that the discussions, which come two weeks before US President Joe Biden makes his first official visit to the region, were supposed to last several days.

The parties have "exchanged views and proposals on the remaining issues", Kanani said.

The US State Department meanwhile said that the indirect consultations were ongoing on Wednesday in Doha, but said it had nothing immediately to say about the talks.

A State Department spokesperson said the US was prepared to return to the deal, but reiterated calls for Tehran “to drop their additional demands that go beyond” the scope of the pact.

Differences between Tehran and Washington have notably included Iran’s demand that its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps be removed from a US terror list.

 

‘Trump method’ 

 

The arch-rivals are meeting indirectly — passing messages from different areas of the same hotel — to try to break an impasse in attempts to restart the 2015 agreement.

The deal, which lifted sanctions in return for Iran curbing its nuclear programme, was abandoned unilaterally by former US president Donald Trump in 2018.

The international talks on reviving the deal had been taking place since April 2021 in Vienna, before the process stalled last March.

Iranian officials earlier said they were hoping for progress in Qatar — but warned the Americans to abandon the “Trump method” of negotiating.

“We hope that, God willing, we can reach a positive and acceptable agreement if the United States abandons the Trump method,” Iranian government spokesman Ali Bahadori-Jahromi said.

He described the “Trump method” as “non-compliance with international law and past agreements and disregard for the legal rights of the Iranian people”.

Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian also said Iran was open to a deal in Doha, but that it wouldn’t cross its “red lines”.

“We are serious” in our desire to finalise an agreement, he said, stressing that his country would not retreat from the “red lines” it has drawn.

“If the American side has serious intentions and is realistic, an agreement is available at this stage and in this round of negotiations,” he said, quoted by IRNA state news agency.

IRNA has previously described the “red lines” as lifting all sanctions as related to the nuclear agreement, creating a mechanism to verify they have been lifted, and making sure the US does not withdraw from the deal.

The deal has been hanging by a thread since 2018, when Trump unilaterally withdrew and began reimposing harsh economic sanctions on America’s arch-enemy.

Soaring oil prices and the lack of spare capacity make this an opportunity for Tehran to push for the lifting of sanctions on Iranian crude, said Alex Vatanka, director of the Iran programme at the Washington-based Middle East Institute think tank.

 

US' Libya envoy warns: Don't use oil as a weapon

By - Jun 29,2022 - Last updated at Jun 29,2022

TRIPOLI — The United States' ambassador to Libya warned rival actors on Wednesday against using the country's oil wealth as a political "weapon", amid an internal blockade that has slashed output since April.

"The United States continues to support the vast majority of Libyans who expect elections and demand that the country's oil wealth be managed responsibly," Ambassador Richard Norland said, according to an embassy statement.

Normally based in neighbouring Tunisia due to Libya's delicate security situation, Norland spoke in Tripoli during the first overnight visit by an American ambassador in years.

Libya, which has Africa's largest oil reserves, has seen more than a decade of intermittent conflict since the 2011 toppling and killing of Muammar Qadhafi in a NATO-backed revolt.

"While the ceasefire and dialogue have continued, it is alarming that some narrow interests are using the oil sector as a weapon or have unilaterally made decisions affecting the spending of Libya's oil revenues," Norland said.

Crude pipelines, refineries and export terminals have frequently been blockaded in both local disputes and bigger political struggles.

Norland’s comments came more than two months into the latest blockade, by forces backing one of two governments vying for power.

The envoy said Washington supports “concrete steps to end the misuse of economic tools as part of political disputes, by any side”.

His comments also come as US inflation has soared to highs not seen in decades, due in part to elevated global oil prices.

Libya’s National Oil Corporation (NOC) said on Monday that a blockade at oil installations in the central Mediterranean coastal region of Sirte meant it may declare force majeur, a measure freeing it of contractual obligations due to circumstances beyond its control.

The blockade of two major oil export terminals and several oilfields began in April, after the eastern-based parliament appointed a new prime minister in a direct challenge to a Tripoli-based unity government.

The parliament-backed candidate, ex-interior minister Fathi Bashagha, is supported by eastern-based military strongman Khalifa Haftar, who led a failed bid to seize Tripoli in 2019-20.

Tripoli-based premier Abdulhamid Dbeibah, appointed as part of UN-led peace efforts after that battle, has refused to cede power except to an elected government.

While Haftar’s forces control major oil facilities, revenues are managed by the central bank of Libya, whose head is seen as close to Dbeibah.

Syria seizes record 2.3 tonnes of Captagon — ministry

By - Jun 29,2022 - Last updated at Jun 29,2022

This file handout photo released by the official Syrian Arab News Agency on November 30, 2021 shows bags containing the banned stimulant captagon that was seized by authorities on a shipment destined to Saudi Arabia (AFP photo)

DAMASCUS — Syrian counter-narcotics units seized a record haul of 2.3 tonnes of the amphetamine-type stimulant known as captagon, the interior ministry announced on Wednesday.

Law enforcement officers had earlier discovered 249 kilos of captagon hidden in steel machinery inside containers ready to leave the Mediterranean port of  Latakia.

The ensuing investigation alerted the authorities “to the existence of a warehouse containing drugs on a farm” in the nearby province of Hama, a ministry statement said.

“The weight of the confiscated bags amounted to 2,103 kilos,” the statement said, adding that 10 arrests were made and several vehicles confiscated.

With a kilo of captagon estimated to amount to around 6,000 pills, the cumulated number of pills seized tops 14 million, the largest recorded haul by the Syrian government in years.

Several recent reports have accused senior members of President Bashar Assad’s government and security apparatus of being at the heart of the booming captagon trade.

A three-minute video released by the Syrian interior ministry shows an anti-drug squad raiding a deserted farm and discovering stacks of neatly packed pills.

The haul would be the largest recorded this year and bring the total of pills seized in the first half of 2022 to more than 145 million a across the region, according to an AFP tally.

 

Still growing

 

The Syrian ministry did not specify exactly when the seizures were made, who were the men detained and what was the intended destination of the shipment.

The announcement of the seizure came three days after the International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking.

Anti-narcotics departments in Jordan, Saudi Arabia and other countries announced drug seizure figures for 2022 that suggest the captagon trade is still growing.

The vast majority of captagon, which derives its name from a once legal drug against narcolepsy, is produced in Syria and Lebanon and smuggled to its main consumer market in the Gulf.

It is used by the super-rich in Saudi Arabia as a party pill, by armed men for the feeling of invincibility it produces as well as by poorer people who need to work several jobs to make ends meet.

Based on the street value of captagon and the most conservative production estimates, the growing captagon economy is thought to top $5 billion in worth.

That would make it by some margin the sanction-crippled Syrian government’s largest export and biggest source of income.

The Syrian authorities have periodically announced seizures of much smaller amounts and faced accusations from some of their neighbours that they were not seriously cracking down on trafficking.

 

Iran says guard killed at Afghan border

Water rights issues have also increased tensions between two neighbours

By - Jun 29,2022 - Last updated at Jun 29,2022

In this file photo taken on October 10, 2012 Iranian soldiers keep watch at a drug trafficking patrol post in Milak, south-eastern Iran, near the Afghan border (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — An Iranian border guard was killed in an “incident” in the country’s southeast at a border crossing with Afghanistan, Iran’s foreign ministry said on Wednesday.

“The dimensions of this unfortunate incident in the Milak border area, which led to the martyrdom of the dear border guard of the Islamic Republic of Iran, are being investigated by the authorities and will be announced as soon as the issue is clarified,” ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said.

He expressed condolences to the family of Mohammad Sayyad who was killed at Milak crossing in Sistan-Baluchestan province.

Afghan officials told AFP there had been no clashes between Iranian and Afghan forces near the border.

“Officials in Afghanistan’s caretaker government are expected to take serious action to clarify the dimensions of the issue, punish the perpetrators and take the necessary measures to prevent similar incidents,” Kanani added.

Iran, like many other nations, has so far not recognised the new government formed by the Taliban after it took power amid a hasty withdrawal by US-led foreign forces in August.

While Iran insists that the Taliban form an inclusive administration, the Islamist movement has formed an all-male Cabinet made up entirely of members of the group, and almost exclusively of ethnic Pashtuns.

Water rights issues have also increased tensions between the two neighbours.

In January, demonstrators in Sistan-Baluchestan rallied at a border crossing for a protest over water from the Helmand River.

Last year, then Afghan president Ashraf Ghani inaugurated Kamal Khan Dam on the river, announcing that Afghanistan would no longer supply “extra” water to Iran for free but instead exchange it for oil.

Iran has hosted millions of Afghan refugees for decades, but fresh waves have flooded the country since the Taliban’s return to power.

The two nations have the Persian language in common — known as Farsi in Iran and Dari in Afghanistan — but a majority of Afghans are Sunni Muslims compared to their mostly Shiite neighbours.

Iran has long had testy relations with the Taliban, who raided Tehran’s consulate in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-i-Sharif in 1998 killing 10 diplomats and a journalist.

 

Saudi artists marvel at surprise patron: Their own rulers

By - Jun 29,2022 - Last updated at Jun 29,2022

Saudi artist Ahmed Mater works at his studio in the capital Riyadh on June 19, 2022, on a project to be exhibited in the desert outside Al Ula, in the north-western Medina region (AFP photo)

AL ULA, Saudi Arabia — In one of Saudi artist Ahmed Mater’s best-known works, a silhouette of a gas pump morphs into a man holding a gun to his head — a clear critique of oil’s damaging influence. 

Yet for several years, most Saudis couldn’t see the piece, titled “Evolution of Man”, as local curators deemed it too sensitive to show in the oil-reliant kingdom.

Its inclusion in a recent exhibition in the capital Riyadh is just one sign of changing times.

With Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, the de facto ruler, eager to rebrand conservative Saudi Arabia as a global arts destination, officials are heaping previously unheard-of opportunities on Mater and his peers.

They unveiled the latest on Monday: A plan to feature Mater and another politically minded Saudi artist, Manal AlDowayan, in a series of permanent installations in the deserts outside Al Ula, a budding tourist magnet in the north-western Medina region.

To critics of the Saudi royal family, such projects smack of “artwashing”, an attempt to launder the image of a country notorious for silencing dissidents, most notably slain journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

But for artists like Mater, the state backing is a welcome relief after years of straining to reach Saudi audiences and cultivate a vibrant domestic arts scene.

“I usually believe in creating a grassroots movement that will be organic, but what if there is top-down support for this? Even better,” he told AFP.

“That’s the change. That’s the new thing.”

 

‘Valley of the arts’

 

The project in Al Ula — known as Wadi Al Fann, or “Valley of the Arts” — is ultimately meant to cover 65 square kilometres of Saudi desert with new examples of “land art”, the movement that sought to bring art out of galleries and into nature.

Besides Mater and Al Dowayan, contributors include land art giants like Hungarian-American Agnes Denes, who in the 1980s famously planted and harvested two acres of wheat just blocks from Wall Street.

It is part of a broader goal to transform Al Ula, famed for its ancient Nabataean tombs dotted amid sandstone mountains and wadis, into a top-tier arts hub, complete with luxury eco-resorts and a posh theatre covered in mirrored panels.

The Wadi AlFann works “are on a scale and ambition, and they have such vision behind them, that I think people will want to come for many, many generations to visit them”, said curator Iwona Blazwick, former director of London’s Whitechapel Gallery.

Al Dowayan, one of the Saudi contributors, told AFP that until recently her work had been seen more frequently outside the kingdom than within it, though she dismissed the notion that this had anything to do with censorship.

“I was talking about very tough subjects when it was really restrictive here, and I was fine. They published me in every single newspaper. I’ve never been censored,” she said.

The nature of visual artists’ work gives them more space to speak out than Saudi activists might enjoy, said Eman Alhussein, non-resident fellow with the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.

“Artists are able to express themselves more freely because their artwork can be interpreted in different ways,” she said.

That seems especially true these days, as Saudi authorities lean on the arts to help soften their austere reputation.

After two decades of showing largely for foreigners, Al Dowayan is now basking in a surge of domestic attention.

“I’m being exhibited constantly here,” she said. “I’m being rediscovered by my people, my community. They used to follow me on Instagram. Now they can actually go and see the artworks.” 

Legacy of restrictions

 

Mater, too, has had mostly positive experiences with Saudi authorities.

Yet he has also seen the limits on free expression in Saudi Arabia through the case of his childhood friend Ashraf  Fayadh, a fellow artist who has been behind bars for nearly a decade.

Fayadh, a Palestinian poet living in the kingdom, was charged with apostasy in 2014 after a Saudi citizen accused him of promoting atheism.

A court sentenced him to death in 2015, though his sentence was reduced to eight years on appeal.

Mater sees Fayadh’s case as a throwback to a less open period and does not think it would play out the same way today.

Nevertheless, “the case is still very important because Ashraf has to come out,” Mater said, adding that he hopes his friend will be released soon.

In the meantime, Mater is pressing on with his politically charged work.

His project for Wadi Al Fann involves building tunnels that visitors can enter. Once inside, their hologram-like images will be projected above the dunes — an effect akin to a mirage.

The idea is to use a monument to centre ordinary people, a concept that doesn’t necessarily jibe with monarchical rule.

“Usually sculpture is about landmarks of power,” Mater said.

“And what I’m talking about here is, the power is the people themselves.”

 

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