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TIME: Almanac 1990s
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<text id=91TT0381>
<title>
Feb. 18, 1991: On The Disco Front
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Feb. 18, 1991 The War Comes Home
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE GULF WAR, Page 30
On the Disco Front
</hdr><body>
<p> It is a quarter to one in the morning, and Medo, a
16-year-old Kuwaiti, is chatting with his friend and compatriot
Khaled, 22, as they prop up a wall at Sultana's, the
third-floor disco at Cairo's Semiramis Inter-Continental.
"Cairo is boring," grumbles Medo. Khaled murmurs in agreement
as he eyes the action on the floor. "I come here every night,"
Medo says. "There's nothing else to do."
</p>
<p> Nothing to do! Their country has been snatched by a thief;
Americans, Egyptians, Britons and Saudis, among others, are
braving the gulf deserts and Saddam's rockets to win it back
for them, and these two able-bodied young men say there is
nothing to do. For those who do not think Kuwait is worth the
fight, the habits of Medo and Khaled are all the anecdotal
evidence needed to prove the Kuwaitis are a spoiled and
arrogant bunch.
</p>
<p> But Kuwait's elders do understand the problem. One exile
group in Cairo has sent flyers to the 7,000 Kuwaiti families
in the city, asking them to behave modestly and stop gathering
conspicuously in public. Sober-minded Kuwaitis insist that
their boogie-loving brethren, featured prominently in the
Western media, make up only a tiny minority of their
countrymen. "A lot of the criticism is bitter and not deserved
just because there are a few crazy people," says Adeeb Essa,
spokesman for the Association for Free Kuwait in London.
</p>
<p> In fact, while Kuwaitis were the most notorious among the
gulf nationalities for flaunting their wealth and easy
life-style, the Aug. 2 invasion was a cold shower for most of
them. Though a few youths still dance the nights away, many of
their peers are at the front. An estimated 23,000 Kuwaitis are
believed to be under arms in Saudi Arabia. Only 7,000 are
military personnel who escaped from Kuwait; the rest are
volunteers. When an exile group in Cairo organized a training
program for nurse's aides, 500 Kuwaitis applied for the 120
slots. Other displaced Kuwaitis are preparing for new lives in
a liberated Kuwait by taking courses in such things as
automobile repair, plumbing, electrical wiring and, for women,
housekeeping. In the past, foreign laborers did such work, but
the new Kuwait is expected to be much more self-sufficient.
Perhaps Medo and Khaled figure they'd better party while they
can.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>