Home Page - Gulf in the Media
HomePoliticsEconomy                               Set Gulfinthemedia.com as home page
Opinions
"Postings of opinions published in the Gulf and international newspapers
 Print  Send This Page
Save Listen to this Article
Gross National Mismanagement   

Kuwait Times - 12 July, 2012
Author: Fouad Al-Obaid

What does a sovereign breach of contract - the K-Dow Deal; a crumbling newly erected national stadium - Jaber Al-Ahmad International Stadium – unable to serve its purpose due to its poorly constructed structural nature; a national airline - Kuwait Airways - forced to ground several of its aging fleet of aircrafts, posting a collective loss standing at a staggering $ 2.7 billion; a national mosque – Masjid Al-Kabeer – that risks collapsing on the believers heads due to recently discovered cracks, have in common?

They are all state projects that are a clear testimony of the ongoing rampant corruption.
Alternatively, we could view them as shocking examples of gross mismanagement. These are not the only projects or institutions that are suffering from poor decision-making, they nevertheless are the tip of an ever growing iceberg. The old mentality that seems prevalent in Kuwait is if it is not ‘literally’ broken, do not bother fixing it. In the case of Jaber Stadium, let us build it so poorly that once it’s complete it would serve as a reminder to all of our desolate incompetence!

People keep complaining in Kuwait that things are not as good as they ought to be. With a projected twelfth year of budgetary surplus, one is led to wonder what good it is to have money and yet be unable to do anything meaningful with it! Countries are arduously working on developing their national infrastructure, investing in education by inviting world-renowned universities to set shop, earnestly believing in the implementation of a knowledge economy. Globally acclaimed is their ability to not only develop their countries in a record breaking time-schedule – I am thinking of Doha, Abu Dhabi, and Dubai, all started developing long after Kuwait. Regardless, here we are with a growing pool of educated and talented individuals who see their educational efforts and skills slowly withering away. The reality is that for much of them without a ‘wasta’ they will never get employed one day. Even if they do, they land up in meaningless, repetitive jobs. Who is to be blamed?

‘Wasta,’ a word any person living in Kuwait needs to come across sooner rather than later. It is a word we all use, but rarely do we give it the proper definition it requires: Corruption: Corruption is what the term ‘wasta’ really comes to means, it is the illegal use of influence through connections to get work done that ought to be done by state employees regardless! The culture of favors that we believe is ascribed to our close social interactions with family and peers is. This is at the essences of our inability to set ourselves free of this mentality that is at the core of our current predicament. Not willing to consider the fact that ‘wasta’ grants people permits without proper inspection; it is what gets poor students good grades; reckless employees with promotions, and the list goes on.

What is tragic is the pathetic need to develop a secondary system that goes against the very principles of the modern civil state in which each citizen is equal before the law. It is equally responsible before the law. The given ‘wasta’ system is what will ensure that hierarchical responsibility is overseen when dealing with employees that know senior civil servants. It will ensure that mistakes are made at all State institutions. It is the cancer that will eventually bring down this country of ours should we not place it under check, sooner than later. We will see that as the national population is growing, and with a job market in need to absorb the ever growing numbers of graduates that the ‘wasta’ concept can only go really far in promoting incompetence.

When the tipping point comes – and it will come – the tragedy will be asked by a population who believes that religion asks of us a high degree of integrity is void. Perhaps this article is a highlight of pertinent Islamic references and it should be pointed out. As a dear professor once taught me, “once you know something no longer can you deny it, you can only choose to ignore it.”
“O ye who believe! Do not squander one another’s wealth in vanities, but let there be amongst you traffic and trade by mutual good will.” – The Holy Quran, 4:29

“Woe to those who give short measure, who demand of other people full measure for themselves, but give less than they should when it is they who weigh or measure for others! Do these people not realize that they will be raised up on a Mighty Day, a Day when everyone will stand before the Lord of the Worlds? “- The Holy Quran, 83:1-4

“God commands you [people] to return things entrusted to you to their rightful owners, and if you judge between people, to do so with justice.” -The Holy Quran, 4:58

“O you who believe! Fulfill your obligations.” – The Holy Quran, 5:1

“And spend of your substance in the cause of God. And make not your own hands contribute to (your) destruction; But do good; for God loves those who do good.” – The Holy Quran, 2: 195

May the aforementioned verse act as a reminder to those that profess a faith in Islam and yet decide to contradict public moral, ethics, and their very integrity in search for short-term gains. Philosophy and spirituality aside, let us endeavor together to lay the solid foundations of a moral, ethical, and just society; one that we would pride ourselves to be a member of. Corruption starts at the individual level, let us all strive to perfect our very selves, and to act as counters to corruption by shouldering our collective responsibility to ourselves and peers.

By Fouad Al-Obaid
fouad@kuwaittimes.net
Twitter: @Fouadalobaid
 
Iraq will become Obama's problem again
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-05-19
Author : Michael Knights
Former US ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker views the current situation as a return to the conditions of 2006 and 2007, when Iraq plunged into civil war-like violence....
Rescuing the revolution in Syria
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-05-18
Author : Abdul Rahman Al-Rashed
Having started the grueling process of choosing a new head of their government in exile two months ago, Syrians are likely to decide on a new leader next week....
Revisiting 9/11 attacks and Boston bombings
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-05-18
Author : Abdulrahman Al-Zuhayyan
The recent Boston bombings are reminiscent of the infamous attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, although the Boston explosions were far less in magnitude in terms of destruction and number of...
Turkey has to reboot its Syria strategy
Source : The Daily Star  
Date : 2013-05-17
Author : Hugh Pope
For much of the late 2000s, Turkey hoped that a booming economy, the prestige of combative Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and a burst of regional admiration for its successful...
Obama's Betrayal
Source : Asharq Al-Awsat  
Date : 2013-05-17
Author : Eyad Abu Shakra
It is obvious that the priorities of the Syrian rebels are different from those of the US president and the British prime minister....
Two Men Who Frighten the Supreme Guide
Source : Asharq Al-Awsat  
Date : 2013-05-17
Author : Amir Taheri
It is easy to dismiss the presidential election in Iran as a charade. The exercise is flawed from the start because of the pre-selection of candidates....
The Syrian Zarqawi and Iranian Rowdiness
Source : Al Hayat  
Date : 2013-05-17
Author : Zuheir Kseibati
On the anniversary of Palestine's Nakba, the Arab world is swimming in a sea of crises and blood. Indeed, the massacres’ hours of darkness are extending and the dagger of...
Think of ordinary Bahrainis...
Source : Gulf Daily News  
Date : 2013-05-17
Author : Ali Muhammad
In December of 2012, a lady named Bethan Tichborne was beaten and arrested for climbing a fence and waving a banner at a public event in Witney, England. The banner...
Syria tests Obama's wits
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-05-17
Author : Hisham Melhem
When US President Barack Obama said that the Syrian regime's use of chemical weapons, or even the transfer of chemical weapons, would represent an unacceptable violation of red lines, he...
Erdogan and Obama: Best friends no more
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-05-17
Author : Joyce Karam
There was a time when Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's number was on Barack Obama's speed dial, and when their photo-ops in Hagia Sophia and Pittsburgh glowed with political...
Making peace amid war
Source : Gulf Today  
Date : 2013-05-17
Author : Michael Jansen
Coexistence among Syria's conflicted communities is in short supply these days but volunteers for Musalaha, a group whose name means "reconciliation," are trying to engineer rapprochement and tolerance....
Not in Kuwait
Source : Kuwait Times  
Date : 2013-05-17
Author : Labeed Abdal
When I see the main headlines in the newspapers, including those about electricity power cuts, deportation of a million expats in 10 years, the jumbo sized mistake with Dow Chemicals,...
For Syria, the civil war is still to come
Source : Guardian Unlimited-U.K.  
Date : 2013-05-16
Author : Jeremy Greenstock
The US and Russia announced plans for a conference on Syria last week. The world can be forgiven for wondering: what use is that? Indeed, what use has any outside...
Washington blunders yet again in Syria
Source : The Daily Star  
Date : 2013-05-16
Author : Michael Young
It is not reassuring that we know next to nothing about the details of the international conference on Syria that has been endorsed by the United States and Russia. It...
Rafsanjani's Return to the Presidency?
Source : Al Hayat  
Date : 2013-05-16
Author : Abdullah Iskandar
In June 2005, no one would have bet one penny on the election of the quasi-obscure head of the Tehran Municipality, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, as the president of Iran in the...
Total 200 Results in 14 Pages
  2 
For more news, views and reports about this topic, please subscribe
to GRC website: www.grc.ae
Sun May 19, 2013| 09-رجب-1434هـ
Assad insists he will not quit
UAE trade surplus to hit $ 90.7 billion
13 killed, 10 policemen kidnapped in Iraq violence
Qatar banks record big asset gains
Coronavirus cases stand at 31 in Saudi Arabia
Kuwaiti SMEs Fund capital must serve national economy
Suspected US drone in Yemen kills 4 militants
Iraqi merchants buying Iranian wheat at a higher price
Gulf officials discuss joint youth programs
GCC is 13th largest world economy
Height of adventure: Saudi woman conquers Everest
Dubai businesses upbeat
US takes no stand as women barred from Iran elections
Bahrain condemns Iran's interference in internal affairs
Kuwaiti, Jordanian lawmakers discuss cooperation
Food prices continue to rise in Saudi Arabia
    Newspaper Editorials
A war of attrition is looming
Bloodshed in Iraq
More>>  
    Opinions
US war on terror will not last forever
Iraq will become Obama's problem again
More>>  
    GCC Press Agencies
Day's main stories from the GCC Press Agencies
    Reports
US Goals and Strategies toward the Arab World
US-Iranian competition: The Gulf military balance - II
More>>  
    Bank Reports
GCC Central Banks Digest - March 2013 - Update
Saudi Chartbook - May 2013
More>>  
    GRC Analysis
Building a Strong Saudi-Japan Relationship
Poor Gulf: Inequality and the Lack of Statistics
Whither GCC-US Relations?
    GRC Commentary
On Relations between Rulers and Citizens: The Need for a New Social/Political Contract in the GCC States
Key Issue Facing the Saudi Ruling House.
    GRC Book Review
Beyond Regionalism? Regional Cooperation, Regionalism and Regionalization in the Middle East
India, GCC and the Global Energy Regime: Exploring Interdependence and Outlook for Collaboration.
    GRC Press Release
Gulf Research Center press releases to the media
    GRC Publications
Asia-Gulf Economic Relations in the 21st Century: The Local to Global Transformation
Assessment of the Security Situation in Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and the Arab Gulf States
China in the Eyes of the Saudi Media
    GRC Newsletters/Bulletins

Enter your email to get the Newsletter
Go
      
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | About Us |
Weather | Qibla Directions | Hijri Date Conversion Tool
Full Page :total time:0  |   57-- 57 Middle Page :0  --   | Right : 57 - 57--en--sess-enreq-en-coming