Quick,
name the wealthiest Islamic country in the world. Saudi Arabia, you say?
Wrong. Kuwait? Guess again. In terms of standard of living, the Sultanate of
Brunei is the leader among Muslim countries.
Located
in a remote corner of the island of Borneo and cut in two by a sliver of the
Malaysian state of Sarawak, Brunei has been blessed with huge reserves of oil
and natural gas. This wealth has made the Sultan of Brunei one of the world's
richest men. Tales of extravagance from the royal family are the stuff of
legend. Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah hired Michael Jackson to perform at his 50th
birthday party and Whitney Houston provided entertainment at his daughter's
wedding (the same daughter who received a private jet for her 18th
birthday). Italian sports cars, polo and rumors of harems around the world
gave rise to a legendary profligacy that would make even a Saudi prince blush.
Things came to a head, however, when the Sultan's younger brother, Prince
Jefri, put the country's finances in serious jeopardy through his outlandish
spending and ill-advised investments. Some estimate that Prince Jefri cost the
country over $7 billion; as one person in Brunei put it to me, the prince has
since been "grounded."
The
Sultan has been generous to his subjects as well. You're not likely to find
another monarch who has provided his people with an amusement park such as
Jerudong Park, which has been described as a "cross between an Arabian Night's
fantasy and Disneyland," free of charge. Furthermore, the people of Brunei pay
no income tax, receive free health care and education, subsidized housing, and generous pensions for the elderly.
All
of which could explain the utter docility of Brunei's people. Considering both
its reputation for a more conservative interpretation of Islam than its
neighbors--Malaysia and Indonesia--and its fabled wealth, I wondered if I would
find in Brunei a hotbed of fundamentalist sympathies and a potential source of
funding of extremist causes. What I found were people who spoke with deference
of their monarch, who avoided just about any talk of politics, and who
continuously stressed the peace of their country, Brunei Darussalam, or "abode of
peace."
In
the country's capital, Bandar Seri Begawan, I visited the town's main mosque,
Masjid Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddin. The mosque was built in 1959 by the current
Sultan's father of granite imported from Hong Kong, tiled with marble from
Italy; its prayer rugs came from Iran and its chandeliers from England.
Everyone
I encountered in Brunei was extremely friendly. My water taxi driver gave me a
big thumbs-up sign when I told him the country of my birth as we raced around
the traditional houses on stilts that comprise the water village Kampung Ayer.
A naturalist told me fondly of his visit to California as he guided me through
mangrove swamps in search of one of Borneo's treasures, the Proboscis Monkey,
an endangered monkey that is the world's largest and found only on Borneo.
But
though everyone I spoke to was keen to stress the stability and peace of
Brunei, the situation is bit more complicated than that. Dissent is not
tolerated in the Sultanate and constitutional freedoms have been suspended since
the Brunei Revolt of 1962.
As
is so common in history, a tiny country was caught between two much larger
countries, Indonesia and Malaysia. When Brunei moved towards joining the
Malaysian Federation under the guidance of its British protectors, the strongman
of Indonesia, Sukarno--who had dreamed of making Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei
a part of a "Greater Indonesia"--cried foul and mobilized elements of the army
based in the Indonesian state of Kalimantan, also on the island of Borneo. He
took advantage of the Sultan's hesitancy to join the federation and sent his
troops in to stir up unrest. The Sultan appealed for British help and British
and Gurkha troops were mobilized from Malaysia and Singapore by air and sea to
help stifle the unrest. During the violence, the Sultan suspended rights from
the British-authored constitution and soon after finally opted to stay out of
the Malaysian federation with guarantees of British protection in place to
mollify his concerns about his rapacious neighbors, a security arrangement
which still stands today.
Brunei
finally became officially independent in 1984. Shortly before my visit, the
Sultanate celebrated its twentieth year of independence. "All citizens of the
world seek peace, of which we possess now," Sultan Bolkaih boasted to his
subjects. But when I asked Abu Sufian Ali of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
why the country is still in the state of emergency declared during the Brunei
Revolt, he just grinned embarrassedly and said, "The most important thing is to
live in a peaceful environment." I asked him what Brunei has done to prepare
the country for the possibility that oil and gas reserves will eventually run
out and he told me that "experts" have been predicting these sources would run
out for twenty years but "it is still down there." When pressed, he said, "We
have an agency that invests abroad" to ensure the financial well-being of the
country. The agency invests in "hotels, investment funds and bonds," but there
was no way for me, or citizens of Brunei for that matter, to find out about
this agency's specific assets or what is done with the profits.
When
I met with the Haji Bujang Haji Masu'ut Director of the Information Department
of the Prime Minister's office, he seemed to willing to do just about anything
for me aside from give me information about the government. He ignored or
deflected my questions about the government altogether, instead inquiring about
my hotel. So persistent was he in automatically turning my questions about
political affairs to questions of my accommodation, that I realized that
despite his solicitous manner he was unhappy that a journalist had come to the
country without formally registering with his office, a step I had never heard
of but one which he suggested was routine.
While
this tiny country is certainly peaceful, it is also a somnolent place where
nightlife consists of hanging out in front of the KFC or playing video games at
home, it comes at an Orwellian cost. Last month the country jailed without
trial two retired military and police intelligence officers for leaking
government secrets. The supposed state secrets were posted at www.bruclass.com, but were quickly edited
to remove the offending secrets. Only wordy complaints of bureaucracy and
corruption remained.
The
government does not tolerate criticism of Islam or the Monarchy, so it was of
little surprise to followers of the country's affairs when the memorandum
released by the Internal Security Department claimed that the accused took part
in actions "which were of a subversive nature and are detrimental to the country's
stability and security."
There
would certainly be no protests rocking the streets of Bandar Seri Begawan. But
Mr. Ali did hint that his government had new thoughts on democracy. Perhaps he
felt bad about ducking my questions politics when he suggested an evening tour
of the capital in his car. As we passed the magnificently lit up mosques around
the capital, he told me of the government's interest in the political systems
of Malaysia and Singapore. He asked me my opinions on the governments of those
countries and told me that Ministry of Foreign Affairs was studying their
models, often called "benevolent dictatorships" or "managed democracies", with
an eye towards greater civil liberties for Brunei in the future. It was hard to
tell if he was trying to distract me from his evasive answers to my awkward
questions. But with a robust election season underway in neighboring Malaysia
and Indonesia, he was right in noting, "In this globalized world we can't avoid
looking at these questions."