Monday, July 17, 2017

Rise of India's 'cow politics'

While Hindus consider cows sacred, the religious belief has recently taken a dark turn, morphing into a violent trend that has involved killing cow sellers or suspected beef eaters

Terror units in Syria: US militarism gets more reckless

The U.S. somehow has its own reasons for launching needless wars - taking control of Arab, Asian and African resources, increasing arms sales by prolonging conflicts

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Al Saud hated this article so much, it must be shared widely

[Abdullah Ahmad, Group Editor-in-Chief of Malaysian daily New Straits Times, was removed after writing this piece. Saudis disliked it so much when it was published. It must be shared widely!]



From The New Straits Times
12 November 2003

On The Record: Freeing the Prophet'’s land
Abdullah Ahmad

ANYONE who reads about the House of Saud knows that the story is most unflattering to the dynasty. I have been to Makkah and Madinah 17 times, the last a decade ago. Journeys to the two Islamic holy
sanctuaries were always a delight.

I always looked forward to performing my religious obligations in the land where the Prophet was born, preached the glory of Allah and eventually led the exodus of the faithful from Makkah to Madinah. There he settled to form the first Islamic government and died, aged 63.

On further reading of several decades of revisionism, most enlightened Muslims have come to one assessment and conclusion: Islam has suffered at the hands of the so-called guardian of the holy cities of Makkah and Madinah. My interest in Saudi Arabia, as opposed to my commitment to Makkah and Madinah, has waned and my bookshelves have yielded space to pan-Arabism, modernisation and democratisation there.

I agonise about my co-religionists in Saudi Arabia, especially in the holy cities. The problem is they do not know how to empower themselves, even in the new millennium.

Ever since he declared a victorious end to the invasion of Iraq in May, US President George W. Bush has insisted that the world had been made safer with the toppling of Saddam Hussein. Now, a guerilla or terrorist bomb blast blows a raspberry to that idea on a daily basis.
An especially splattering snort was delivered on Sunday in Riyadh, when a suicide attack killed 17 and injured 120.

Terrorism is like the beast whose appetite increases every time it feeds. Its voracity means that it also dines on borrowed causes — and the cause of the Iraqi resistance against the US occupation and its
collaborators is particularly nourishing. Let us not fool ourselves about this: the longer the military occupation remains unabated, the more the Baath loyalists, fedayeen, Sunni discontents and foreign
insurgents begin to look like the Afghan mujahidin at the time of the Russian onslaught.

For terrorism, Iraq has been a moveable feast extending even into the fasting month of Ramadan. I thought the commemoration of the gift of the Quran would herald a respite, but there were bombings in the first weekend of the holy month in Baghdad, targeting and killing mainly Iraqis. Last weekend, the peace of Ramadan was shattered in the capital of the House of Saud itself, again murdering and maiming mostly Arab expatriates in the housing area of Al-Muhaya.

Saudi Arabia has long been suspected of complicity, conscious or otherwise, in the Sept 11 attacks. No matter how much the kingdom tried to wriggle out of it, there was no escaping the fact that 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis who were educated and of good birth. Above all, so is Osama bin Laden.

Although he might have been swayed by ideologues from countries like Egypt, there is also no escaping the fact that he provided al-Qaeda with at least the initial means to organise itself — Saudi money.

Excess oil money coupled with the ultra-conservative Wahhabi sect was bound to add up, sooner or later, to a combustible mix. Some American analysts contend that the export of radical Islam was a deliberate ploy by the Saudi elite to keep it away from their country. Many moderate Muslims agree.

By supporting the ustaz, mullah and madrasah, chiefly in the Afghan jihad against the Soviet heathens, the rich Saudis tried to pay off the extremists to look elsewhere. But when the Saudi Government invited US troops on its soil in the Gulf War of 1991, al-Qaeda lashed round to bite the hand that fed it. It never forgave the House of Saud for violating Islam's birthplace with the presence of infidel soldiers.

Call it a CIA conspiracy to discredit the so-called custodian of the holy places, but the "export" theory is difficult to disprove.

Riyadh now readily admits that alQaeda is out to overthrow the Saud dynasty, for whom many Muslims do not feel sorry. The rude awakening came in triple suicide bombings in Riyadh in May, which killed 35. The Saudis refer to that day as their own 9/11.

An unprecedented crackdown was launched on Islamic militants.
Suspected al-Qaeda cells were discovered in Riyadh, Makkah and other cities. Hundreds of suspects were arrested. Senior princes and top religious officials denounced ex-tremism and intolerance. Hundreds of imam were sacked or sent for "retraining".

Even so, the running gun battles reported between terrorist suspects and the Saudi police did not silence the background chatter of an imminent attack. Both Britain and the US, who have twice the reason to feel skittish after Iraq, had warned repeatedly that a plot was afoot in the weeks before the weekend bombing.

Al-Qaeda's choice of the Muhaya compound, less well-guarded and housing fewer Westerners than the one in May, may well indicate that the terrorists are up against it. Prince Turki al-Faisal, Saudi ambassador in London, told Reuters that, "To me, it is a clear sign of the desperate group that wants to show it can do things ...after all the successes we've had in tracking these people down over the last
six months." Terrorists, however, are always burning in desperation — they wouldn't otherwise be willing to kill themselves. Their increasing preference for soft targets does not mean that they are on the retreat. I wouldn't want to undercut the prince's knowledge of his country, but governments today bear the ultimate responsibility for securing their citizens against terror. This was the lesson of Sept 11, one that Malaysia learnt a long time ago.

It is, therefore, hard to evade the suspicion that years of complacency, if not patronage, left the terrorist networks deeply dug in. The legitimacy of the House of Saud rests on its allegiance to the severity of Wahhabi doctrine, which has not only encouraged militancy and fanaticism but elevated the hypocrisy of the royals, who live alternate lives in their luxury Manhattan penthouses, London townhouses and mansions in the English countryside, and fritter away millions in the casinos of Las Vegas, Monte Carlo, Cannes, St Moritz, etc.

Wahhabi belief, even the pretence of it, makes the Saudi monarchy resistant to change and democracy. Like any other totalitarian system, an attempt at pluralism will weaken both the regime and the dogma that upholds it. Bush, at a speech to the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington last week, showed excessive optimism when he said: "The Saudi Government is taking first steps toward reform, including a plan for gradual introduction of elections. By giving the Saudi people a greater role in their own society, the Saudi Government can demonstrate true leadership in the region." Wishful thinking.

I wouldn't hold my breath, since, like any other totalitarian system, the Saudi regime is nothing if not adept at its own preservation. It has played a double-edged foreign policy of Wahhabi proselytisation on the one hand and pro-Americanism on the other. The latter has bought it little influence in the advance of Arab and Muslim causes, particularly in Palestine. Now it is caught in the vise of a dilemma. It must distance itself from both.

Though Arab leaders have protested at his presumption, Bush is right in his hopes for the Saudi people. He must, however, first deliver on the hopes of the people of Iraq, not his own.

The Treaty of Sevres (Aug 10, 1920) caused the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire, ironically by Arab collusion with the West. Since then, Islam has lain prostrate in defeat and humiliation.

New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman, who has learnt much since the Iraq war, quoted and echoed Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad in these pages yesterday on the indignity to which Muslims have been subjected, and their angry, thoughtless and hate-filled response.

Until the Muslims come to terms with collective unity, correct interpretation and application of their religion and with what Islam demands and defines consistent with time, I'm afraid they will remain under the sway of non-Muslims and largely Western domination.

Of course, Islam is potentially powerful but is still an undirected political force. Until authoritarian regimes everywhere are utterly destroyed and give way to a new Islamic order, the fortunes of the
ummah will never rise.

Monday, July 14, 2014

When prime minister of Is-Real reacted to formation of a new nation

I post something here from my novel The Merchant King.

Ehud Friedman, the prime minister of Is-Real reacts to the formation of a new nation.

Happy reading...

As the news flashed around the world, editors took notice. New King, New Miserabilia King, A Nation is Born, Nation at Midnight, Visionary Leader, headlines screamed in big fonts.
Singapore was both amused and alarmed at the news. “Is Raygistan a new rival?” The Singaporean Prime Minister posed the question to his foreign advisors, who calmed such concern by pointing out Raygistan’s location on the map in the Indian Ocean.
Singapore wondered if the new nation that did not know whether it was in Asia or Africa could be a friend or a foe. In Singapore’s final analysis, Raygistan was declared as an export destination. No friend or foe, but a buyer of goods and services.
In the nation of Is-Real, whose original name was Is-Real-Or-Not? when it was launched more than 40 years ago, there was consternation in the cabinet.
“If these Neolandians want Raygistan to be their new ally, we are out of business,” Prime Minister Ehud Friedman said in the emergency meeting. Friedman was a former veteran army general who shot to fame for shooting a group of prisoners of war.
“Haven’t these Neolandians learnt anything from the past? They put their interests in Shah’s pocket and Mullahs came and picked the Shah’s pocket. Call the Mostsad chief, he must have something on Falcon,” Friedman thundered before his cabinet minions.
“General, our friends from the Senate were at the Uhlalaland party where Falcon had for the first time spoken about Raygistan,” Intelligence Minister Thomas Lieberman proffered some information.
“First things first. Colonel, don’t ever call me General. I am a politician now. And what else do you know, bugger?” Friedman demanded. Total frankness with each other was the way of life for Is-Real’s politicians.
“Then first things first to you as well, prime minister. Don’t call me Colonel, I won the election with more votes than you did, so screw you! On your point about Raygistan, yes, Neolandia thinks Is-Real has become a liability,” Lieberman spat out more details.
“Bullshit!” Friedman spat in a spittoon that was kept nearby because of his habit of spitting every time he felt disgusted with himself, which was quite often.
“Minister, tell our friends we take a grim view of this new nation. Remind them we have 300 nuclear knobs. When we were launched people called us ‘Is-Real-or-Not?’ Then they just called us ‘Is-Real?’ and when they realised what weapons we got they dropped the question mark. We now put question marks on others, hahahahahahahaha!”
Friedman often went into dramatic speeches during cabinet meetings.
“What’s so funny, Prime Minister?” Lieberman asked.
“Oh, I am thinking about the next phase in our nationhood when we’ll be Is-Realty,” replied Friedman, prompting Lieberman to dish out more information on Raygistan.
“Prime Minister, looks like Raygistan is a new scheme of globalization. Our Big Bucks friends are in it. You know that Putchinsky? He is on this scheme as well.”
“Minister, make sure it is all about money, nothing more than money. Raygistan with its own military will be a game- changer. Sorry, chaps, we need no more rivals.”
Friedman dismissed the meeting with that remark.
In Kindom, they sent a cable of congratulations to the new King. They were happy that a new absolute monarchy had been set up after the transformation of a tribal clan into a royal family. Kindom soon became the first to open its embassy in Raygistan.
Neolandians had their consultants and military but no proper embassy. The Neolandian embassy had to be properly secured on a strategic site. When things go bad, Neolandia’s diplomatic missions become the favorite targets for political activists, feminists, environmentalists, salacious journalists, students, trade unionists, mobs, terrorists. Their causes may be at odds with each other, Neolandia does mange to rile a lot of disparate groups all the time.
In Europe, Purgia, the first among Old World Leaguers (Owls), was furious when the news broke that a new nation has been formed in the undefined Miserabilian-African territory. Didn’t Purgia make it clear to big powers that nothing in Africa must be done without its arbitration? Neolandians argued in their defense that Raygistan was not clearly defined so those Owlish tantrums were not very nice.
Purgian officials were also furious at their journalists for missing the news that mattered so much. The government offered its warship, the Mouse Cheese Vessel to journalists to reach Raygistan but the Neolandians cautioned them not to enter Raygistan’s territorial waters without permission.
“Drop off your journalists in international waters on our boat. Raygistanis do not want any foreign forces other than us. They are pretty paranoid about any violation of their sovereignty right now,” Captain Timothy, one of the officers in charge of the Scarecrow warship, advised the Purgians.
The Purgian press filed several dispatches on the situation in Raygistan, but it could not secure an interview with King Falcon. This did not stop Purgian reporter, Bernard Bernaudet, from posing as an Englishman in the hope of a more sympathetic hearing. But when his cover was blown, he suffered a severe insult. The King became so angry at being deceived that he decided to administer instant justice. He removed his white shoe from his left foot with the left hand and hit the Purgian on his right cheek.
The insult was too grave to be broadcast to the Purgian public. An angry President Jean Pierre declared Purgia would not recognize Raygistan as an independent nation at the U.N. till its geographical location was cleared of all ambiguities. If Raygistan is African then it must join Purge Africa, an alliance of African nations under Purgian patronage.
Unlike the Purgian president, Westminster Witch in London knew what was going on. Neolandia had kept her in the loop about everything. But London-based journalists had not taken it kindly that Neolandia’s Yackety-Yack had monopolised the news of such significance.
Susan Swan, editor of Printfury, Yackety-Yack’s formidable global rival, flew into an uncontrollable rage. “Neolandians have fucked us royally. How about fucking them back?”
She soon gathered her team of ace reporters, people with languages skills in Arabic, Purgian, Hindi, Swahili, Farsi, Turkish and with access to high-level political sources.
“Find out all you can on King Falcon and his kingdom,” Susan Swan said in her stern message to the assembled reporters.
No one captured the development as presciently as a Yemeni journalist. He had been briefed about the King’s thinking by a local merchant who was present during the swearing-in ceremony of King Falcon. His prescient passage read: “A Nimrod is born again. Is he going to retry to create the Tower of Babel? Falcon is the new god-king. Look out for the signs of Babylon in the sky.”
Printfury’s journalists flew to Raygistan from London, benefiting from the direct service provided by British Fly. The new King had banned the use of the beach to airline girls, whose antics in bikinis were believed to have caused his father to behave irrationally, making Nasir no longer fit to lead his people. The girls had heard stories about how Falcon became king. Staying at the same hotel used by the airline crew, Printfury’s journalists were able to glean salacious gossip.

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Once upon a time UAE was not as unpleasant

Once upon a time I used to say nice things about Dubai and United Arab Emirates! You can see my comments in the article below (published in Arkansas Democrat-Gazette in March 2006) on the controversy surrounding Dubai's acquisition of six key ports in the United States. I no longer think of UAE-Dubai as a pleasant place. The financial crisis in 2008 and the Arab uprisings of 2011, which claimed some star dictators, have made the Gulf Arab states, in particular Saudi Arabia and UAE, paranoid. I have experienced their irrational behavior and foolish arrogance, before and after leaving the UAE. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette journalist Heather Wecsler was kind enough to email me her article - Shakir Husain)

Americans in Dubai react to flap

Fears over port deal baseless, Arkansan says

BY HEATHER WECSLER ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE
    Like others in the United Arab Emirates interviewed by the Democrat-Gazette, former Arkansan Winfred L. Thompson sees no reason Americans should fear a deal that would allow a Dubai firm to take over operations at six U.S. ports.
    U.S. policymakers’ criticism of the deal has baffled many who live in this Arab country that boasts Western-style resorts, gleaming skyscrapers and global business aspirations, Thompson said.
    “Generally, there is shock and disappointment that an Emirati company is viewed with such suspicion,” the former Conway resident said by e-mail from Sharjah, an emirate — essentially another city-state — roughly the same driving distance as between Little Rock and Sherwood.
    “Emiratis generally think of themselves as friends of the United States and cannot understand why the sentiment is not reciprocated.”     
Last week, a federal panel opened a 45-day investigation into whether the deal with Dubai Ports World, a state-owned company in the United Arab Emirates, threatens national security. The firm offered to submit to the highly unusual review after U.S. lawmakers of both political parties threatened to block or postpone the entire transaction, which the Bush administration approved in January.
    Under the deal, Dubai Ports World would assume control of shipping terminals in New York, New Jersey, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Miami and New Orleans with the company’s $6.8 billion purchase of London-based Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co. A British citizen will handle the company’s U.S. operations until the federal committee completes its review.
    Just as it has been in the United States, the Washington debate over Dubai Ports World has been front-page news in the nation where the holding company is based. But there, it began mainly as a business story.
    Dubai Ports World is one of the flagship corporate entities of the fast-growing emirate, touted in local media for its successful container terminal operations around the world from Australia to Venezuela to its own shores.
    “People here never expected a straightforward business transaction to become so complicated, particularly since DP World is already in so many countries,” said Shakir Husain, a business reporter who has been covering the company’s most recent ports deal for the Gulf News. The 91,000-circulation publication, based in Dubai, is the largest English-language daily newspaper in the United Arab Emirates and indeed the Arab world.
    Dubai is one of seven sheikdoms led by hereditary rulers that formed a federation after gaining independence from Great Britain in 1971.
    A country where less than a fifth of the population are Emirati citizens and about half come from South Asia, the United Arab Emirates might not even be best described as Arab.
    Mazen Hayek, a Lebanese citizen who has lived and worked in Dubai on and off since 1998, said he went to the country in part because the United Arab Emirates, unlike some of its Middle Eastern neighbors, has embraced First World business practices. For instance, he said, people are hired on the basis of merit rather than just family connections.
    “You come to Dubai, and you have world-class professionals from every single nationality in the world, working here freely and having access to services,” said Hayek, who works in communications. “That’s the strength of the U.A.E.”    
For more than 20 years, Dubai — the nation’s financial capital — has worked to diversify its economy. Today, only about 15 percent of Dubai’s revenue comes from oil, but the city is Middle East headquarters to more than 800 U.S. companies.
    Dubai also attracts more than 5 million tourists a year, many of them from Europe, with such once improbable desert attractions as two water parks and Ski Dubai, a man-made snow park inside Dubai’s largest mall.
    An American who has worked in public relations in Dubai for four and a half years likened the emirate to the Hong Kong or Singapore of the Middle East.
    “If Americans knew what Dubai stood for ... then I don’t think the story would have had the sort of traction it has,” said the American, who asked that his name not be used. “It wouldn’t make sense, but because nobody knows what Dubai is, it’s easy to emphasize the Arab in United Arab Emirates.”     Thompson, another American now living in the United Arab Emirates, said he detects some “blatant prejudice” in the discussion of the ports deal.
    “Of course, the United States has a right to assure the safety of our ports, but the assumption that an Arab company is automatically suspect — while a British company is not — is appalling,” said Thompson, chancellor of the American University of Sharjah and the former president of the University of Central Arkansas in Conway.
    “There has been much more terrorist activity in the United Kingdom than there has ever been in the Emirates.”     
Specifically, he mentioned that three of those suspected in last summer’s suicide bombings of London’s transit system were native Britons, albeit of Pakistani descent. The fourth was Jamaican.
    Husain, the Dubai reporter, said many of his readers see lawmakers’ objections to the transaction as politically motivated.
    “People think it’s ignorance, politics and bias [against Arabs],” he said.
    He said the U.S. government’s extra scrutiny of the ports deal has added to the suspicions of people in Dubai who already disagreed with U.S. policies toward the Middle East.
    “In this climate of suspicion, when something like this happens, it just adds to the suspicion,” Husain said. “It’s damaged the position of the United States.”    
Still, he said the negative reaction has hurt the United States' reputation mainly among local professionals who may choose not to invest in American businesses.
    He and others in Dubai stressed that the United Arab Emirates, while overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim, is dominated by religious moderates.
    Some local mosques had peaceful demonstrations against the Danish newspaper that published cartoons satirizing the Prophet Muhammad, and Zayed University fired a professor who showed the cartoons to her class. But the United Arab Emirates experienced none of the violent protests seen in Muslim countries such as Syria, Lebanon and Afghanistan.
    “Although there has been a robust consumer boycott of Danish goods, Denmark and the U.A.E continue to enjoy normal diplomatic relations,” Husain said.
It’s more a land of busy merchants than fanatical mullahs.
    Still, politically and culturally, the United Arab Emirates is not a Western democracy. While the country plans to hold elections later this year for some seats on the Federal National Council — the legislative branch — sheiks still dominate state affairs, according to the CIA's World Factbook. Foreign workers — who make up the vast majority of the population — have no political rights. In its 2005 Human Rights Overview, the Human Rights Watch said those workers are particularly vulnerable to nonpayment of wages and unsafe working conditions.
    Critics of the Dubai Ports World deal also have noted that two of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers came from the United Arab Emirates and about half the money spent on the attacks was wired to al-Qaida terrorists from Dubai banks. Opponents also have contended that Dubai has been a transfer point for smuggled nuclear technology to Iran, Libya and North Korea.
    But Hayek, the Lebanese Dubai resident, said he thinks Americans should seize any opportunity to work more closely with Dubai’s business professionals.
    “We know the U.S. has embarked on efforts to win hearts and minds through several public relations initiatives in the Arab and the Muslim world,” Hayek said. “The best allies, the best people who are fit to be won in terms of hearts and minds, are the people of Dubai.”    
 If the United States fails to build a relationship with such moderates, Hayek fears Americans will be stuck dealing with Muslim radicals.
    Thompson said his homeland and its Arab ally share more in common than just the first word of their names.
    “The U.A.E. is a very cosmopolitan country which, like the United States, has business interests all over the world and, again like the U.S., is a haven for people all over the world,” he said. “I wish more Americans got a chance to visit and get a true picture what the place is like.”

Saturday, April 5, 2014

RAYGISTAN PROCLAIMED, SUPREME LIFESTYLES PROMISED

[Here is a chapter from my political novel The Merchant King, published in India in 2012. Have fun reading!]

RAYGISTAN PROCLAIMED, SUPREME LIFESTYLES PROMISED

In the middle of his intense learning process, there was some disturbing news that made Falcon restless. Some youth from Balad who had left years ago to fight alongside the Mujahideen against Soviet forces in Afghanistan had returned after the war there ended.
Among them was Falcon's half brother Fahd, born to their father's Yemeni wife Zainab. Fahd returned with his Pakistani wife Gulbadan, who was from Peshawar. The group of returnees wanted to create a Kindom-style ruling system. Senior Kindom operatives, called Kindominions, channelled funds and military advice to the Mujahideen and Fahd remained loyal to them.
Balad's emergence as a strategic port between Africa and Miserabilia was not lost on Kindom's rulers. They would be fool not to have it under their sphere of influence. The man who could do their bidding was Fahd.
The island's doddering chieftain Nasir was increasingly behaving in unpredictable ways. It was a sad sight to see him waving with both hands and sending flying kisses to British Fly's female crew who flocked to the beach in their bikinis.
The high council of elders sought to restrict his movement outdoors in order to avoid embarrassment. Balad was no longer the obscure nation it once had been.
Neolandia wanted the guarantee of a continued military base. President Henry made it clear that he would prefer an amenable man like Falcon, who was kept abreast of the situation. It was agreed with ConCorp that Falcon would soon return to Balad to take over the reins.
But before that a quick visit to the great city of glamour, Uhlalaland. Balad could never become a destination for Supreme Lifestyles if the leader of that country was not given a glimpse of the glitzy world.
Before going to Uhlalaland, ConCorp wanted Falcon to meet a group of people. ConCorp collected considerable data on people who could help Balad's transformation into an economic superpower. On the top of the list was Balwinder Singh "Bally", an Indian geek who worked on a Neolandian project that would make the painfully slow Internet a thing of the past.
The second was Hyder Ali "Hey", an extraordinary brain who could unravel any tricky problem in money matters. He was of Pakistani origin and had fled his country after his wife's relatives bayed for his blood because he had dared to marry the girl of a tribe that considered itself higher in social status than his lesser Karachi family.
The third was Sulaiman Isa "Suli." He was an expert in real estate. He came from the island of Khalli Walli and had sailed around the world offering his expertise.
Bally, Hey and Suli were convenient, modified names that were easy on Neolandian tongues.
"With these men in top jobs, Balad won't look like a white man's colony," Benjamin joked with ConCorp.
One urgent matter that nagged Falcon was the issue of succession, which could turn into a crisis if the old man Nasir kicked the bucket. There was a real chance of violence breaking out as Fahd and his supporters were capable of anything when challenged.
Benjamin, on the other hand, was thinking about a grand farewell for the man who would be king.
Putschinsky graciously agreed to host it at his Grand Sunray Hotel and Casino, the Sunray business empire's showpiece location in Uhlalaland.
An international fashion show at the hotel had just ended, so Putschinsky, knowing well that he was going to be entertaining some of Neolandia's most influential people at the hotel, asked the fashion models to enjoy his hospitality for a bit longer. This was Putschinsky's idea of adding glamour to the party.
Putschinsky, being smarter than others in the ways of the world, had set his sights on doing business in Balad.
Benjamin was always precise and immaculate with his planning. He could stage-manage spectacular events that left people thinking they had happened spontaneously.
On the guest list: Senators, casino magnets, real estate developers, drug traffickers with front companies involved in legal businesses, diamond merchants, financiers, ship owners, oil and gas chief executives, film directors, actors, book publishers, diplomats, newspaper editors had all come to the party in honor of "Neolandia's Great Friend in Miserabilia."
That is how Big Bucks and ConCorp had advertised the event. Crown Prince Falcon delivered a speech that was high on promises and direct in its message. It lifted everyone's spirits. It is not everyday that one gets to be at a party full of fashion models and a brand new nation is suddenly proclaimed into being. "Our dear Neolandian friends, excellencies, ladies and gentlemen," Falcon began his address, "we are about to embark on a great journey of nation-building. Together we will create and share the biggest cake of globalization. Come to our nation, Raygistan, and you will have a market of four billion consumers eating out of your hand. Ours maybe a barren land, but those who decide to put in money today will enjoy an eternal harvest of Supreme Lifestyles."
This was not a speech written by professional writers. It sounded like a human being speaking from his heart. No spin of words, pure passion.
"Raygistan" was the word that had surprised Benjanim. What was Falcon talking about?
Another point: Balad's own population was hardly 100,000, a company-size country, but the crown prince was promising a market of four billion consumers!
That was a salesman genius talking, Benjanim thought.
Cynical newspaper editors thought the crown prince had dreamt up some fantasy land, but senators and businessmen saw more clearly the vision of a land where people would live Supreme Lifestyles.
The speech ended with a deafening applause.
But the term Raygistan puzzled Benjamin, so he went to clarify it with Falcon.
"You have Hindustan, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, right? We have chosen a new name for our country. Balad doesn't sound like a proper country. Now we call my country Raygistan."
At Putschinsky's casino, the future king of Raygistan had set the dice rolling for the biggest gamble that a nation could play.