Turki Al-Sheikh, the head of Saudi entertainment, has insulted and insulted Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman after the American rapper Nicky Minag, known for her clothes and pornography, was announced at a music festival in Saudi Arabia. On social media on how to deal with her revealing clothes and bold words in the conservative kingdom.
The rapper will perform at the Jeddah International Festival on July 18.
Some see it as the latest demonstration of easing restrictions on entertainment in the Kingdom and encouraging the growth of the arts sector.
Singer Minag became the most popular on Twitter and many of the singers became involved with this ad.
A large number of activists, politicians and media outlets in the Gulf opened fire on the crown prince because of the major changes in the kingdom's policies that did not respect the religion of the Saudi state.
"Imagine, after waking up from a coma after three years, that the first thing you'll hear is that Nicky Minag will open a music festival in Saudi Arabia, I honestly think I woke up in a parallel world."
Another questioned whether the event organizers searched Google for the singer before hiring her. "No one in Saudi Arabia searched Google for Nicky Minag, did they?"
A user also wrote that the performance of the American singer would be inappropriate, given the proximity of the concert venue (Jeddah) from Mecca, the Kingdom's holiest city and the holiest city for Muslims.
In a video posted on Twitter, a girl wearing hijab wondered why the authorities welcomed the presence of rappers in Saudi Arabia while asking Saudi women to wear abaya to cover the entire body in public places.
"The singer will go and shake her ass and all her songs are not suitable for sex and shakes the ass," said the veiled girl, whose video was erased hours after it was released after it caused a sensation. "Then she asked me to wear the abaya, what the hell is that?"
Others pointed out that the decision to allow the singer to exist in the kingdom hypocrisy contrasts with her appearance in the activities to support homosexuals in the Kingdom's rejection of homosexuality. Saudi Arabia considers homosexuality a crime punishable by death.
Singer Minag was not the first to raise controversy for singing in Saudi Arabia. It was preceded by singer Mariah Carey, who rejected calls by human rights activists to cancel her concert in the kingdom, while rapper Nelly was criticized for reviving the "Men Only" concert.
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