http://www.smh.com.au/world/place-of-horror-where-islamism-meets-capitalism-20111015-1lqdj.html
Place of horror where Islamism meets capitalism 
Tanya Gold
October 16, 2011 
 
Dubai lover Liam Fox. Photo: Reuters

Dubai is a repressive state, hiding behind religious piety and a dreadful kind 
of glitz. 

ONE thing confused me about the British headlines last week, which were 
essentially a morality tale about the loneliness of the professional 
politician. Why did former UK defence secretary Liam Fox choose Dubai for his 
mysterious stopovers between London and Afghanistan? Four times in 18 months he 
laid his head there, when Bahrain or Oman were the usual options. But it was 
Dubai, one of the seven emirates of the United Arab Emirates. Of all the slave 
states in all the towns in all the world, he walks into this one.

Fox is not alone. In 2010, more than 700,000 British tourists stayed in Dubai's 
hotels. The British are Dubai's best customers, which exposes how much people 
will collude with, or ignore, evil if their hotel rooms are cheap, sumptuous 
and have cable TV. Virgin Holidays says on its website: ''Dubai is like no 
other place on Earth. It is a truly fabulous destination where visitors can 
indulge in top-quality hotels, great shopping, fine dining, state-of-the-art 
spas and, of course, fantastic beaches. There is, however, more to Dubai than 
meets the eye …''

Yes indeed. That copy could be rewritten to say: ''It is a truly fabulous 
destination where visitors can indulge in top-quality state censorship, great 
homophobia, fine misogyny, state-of-the-art police brutality and, of course, 
fantastic indentured servitude.''

I went to Dubai two years ago because a friend was going for work and I am not 
a woman to let a friend go shopping in a tyranny alone. I knew there would be 
trouble, reading the guidebook on the plane. Dubai practises religious 
tolerance towards all religions, it said - except Judaism. So I knew I 
shouldn't do anything explicitly Jewish in the UAE, such as complain about the 
racist cartoons of hook-nosed Jews sitting on the world as if it were a big 
space-hopper made of gentiles. But Dubai, owner of the Burj Khalifa, the 
tallest building on Earth, has worse to show us than some casual anti-Semitism.

Dubai, like the rest of the UAE, is a repressive state, hiding behind religious 
piety and that dreadful word glitz. Do not dare to be gay, or adulterous, or a 
democrat in Dubai. Homosexuality will get you up to 10 years in prison. A group 
of transvestites got five years in Abu Dhabi for dressing up; two lesbians got 
a month in Dubai, for kissing on the beach, before being deported. I met a 
British woman in prison in Dubai. She was there for adultery, on the word of 
her husband - pale, thin, denied access to her children, almost too atrophied 
to speak.

It is an authoritarian oligarchy; the face of its ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin 
Rashid al-Maktoum, smiles from billboards and, sometimes, from our Queen's own 
carriage at Ascot. There is no press freedom, just self-censorship. Insulting 
the royal family, or the flag, or possibly the architecture, will get you 
banged up. Everything gets you banged up in Dubai, except conformity and 
mindless shopping.

And who built this city in the desert? There are 250,000 foreign workers in 
Dubai, mostly from India and Bangladesh. They are indentured servants, slaves. 
The usual way to recruit them is to draw them a picture of joy - great wages, 
fabulous working conditions - and charge them an enormous recruitment fee. 
Then, when they arrive, the construction companies often steal their passports, 
deny them their wages and say they must work endlessly to pay for their return 
home, while living 10 to a room and working in terrible heat. They cannot 
change jobs, and they cannot strike. Last year 113 Indians committed suicide in 
Dubai, or one every three days.

And there is no stopping it. The recession is a blip as the UAE expands like an 
octopus. A vast project is afoot to create a new tourist paradise. Saadiyat 
Island in Abu Dhabi will be ready in 2020. The Louvre, which should know 
better, but doesn't, will have an annexe there; so will the Guggenheim, and so 
will New York - New York! - University.

We asked a Welsh couple why they came here. The answer arrived, from the man: 
the hotel staff would hold my dick if I asked. For me, that is not an advert, 
but others like to travel where labour is cheap and desperate and therefore 
loving.

It is almost understandable, if you are a psychopath. For every piece of human 
misery Dubai offers, it has a wondrous piece of leisure to distract you. This 
is its terror. So there are buildings of incredible scope and ugliness, fake 
islands in the shape of continents, and the Burj al-Arab Hotel, which is shaped 
like a sail and stuck above the Arabian Gulf.

This is all meat for gibbering travel PRs. There are many places on Earth as 
repressive, but North Korea and Saudi Arabia are not touted as dirty weekend 
destinations for residents of liberal democracies. Dubai is a place of horror, 
where fundamentalism meets hyper-capitalism. Could anything be worse? So again, 
Liam Fox, why?

GUARDIAN


Read more: 
http://www.smh.com.au/world/place-of-horror-where-islamism-meets-capitalism-20111015-1lqdj.html#ixzz1aymY2yfr


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