lavishly spending on National Day to beautify House of Saud’s image
Despite the tension and instability in Saudi Arabia these days after targeting Aramco facilities in the east of the country, the Saudi regime continues to flounder and spend lavishly to try to beautify its image.
A document on preparations to celebrate the Kingdom’s National Day revealed significant and significant spending on “entertainment” under the guidance of Mohammed bin Salman.
“Mujtahid” tweeter account, known for publishing the royal court’s secrets, said in a tweet: “The regional princes are racing to please Bin Salman, who is exaggerating at the parties.
He denounced that “despite the atmosphere of confrontation with Iran, and the growing danger of the Houthis, and appeal to the wise that the authority of the Saudis returned to its senses and stop entertainment and celebrations.”
The document attached to the tweet, the allocation of several halls and about 200 buses to transport thousands of participants to celebrate the National Day, scheduled for Sunday.
One week after the Houthis targeted the world’s two largest oil facilities in the east of the kingdom, half of the kingdom’s oil production, on which its economy relies, has stopped.
The Kingdom celebrates Sunday, the national day of the country, amid a festive atmosphere different from previous years; by virtue of the policy of “openness” adopted by “bin Salman” and opposed by a wide segment; for incompatibility with the customs of conservative society.
Since his inauguration, Bin Salman has reduced the powers of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, and established the Entertainment Authority, which is credited with organizing loud and mixed concerts and attracting bands and artists from abroad for the first time in the Kingdom’s history.
In recent months, the Saudi regime has flooded the kingdom with suspicious steps to entertainment since the establishment of a special body in 2016, which has come under fire for its role in changing the religious and traditional character of the kingdom.
The Saudi regime on December 11 allowed the opening of cinemas after a ban of more than three decades, and the opening of cinema halls is expected to begin in March.
The number of restaurants and cafes licensed in the Kingdom to offer “live shows” activity rose to 132 in Riyadh, Jeddah, Khobar and Dammam, three months after the opening of the license to hold live shows in restaurants and cafes.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is pushing a coup against the kingdom’s religious and moral heritage by opening up to entertainment and hosting foreign teams with astronomical sums to provide a picture of the regime’s internal and external abuses.
In addition, the Saudis are trying to achieve a number of objectives with suspicious practices, the most important of which is to distract Saudi citizens from their repressive regime and crimes and to raise money from large financial revenues for parties and events, including pornography in the land of the Two Holy Mosques.