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Saudi women activists detail torture allegations in court


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Saudi women activists detail torture allegations in court

By Stephen Kalin

 

2019-03-27T082240Z_1_LYNXNPEF2Q0ER_RTROPTP_4_WOMENS-DAY-SAUDI-FRANCE.JPG

FILE PHOTO: Demonstrators from Amnesty International hold placards outside the Saudi Arabian Embassy to protest on International Women's day to urge Saudi authorities to release jailed women's rights activists Loujain al-Hathloul, Eman al-Nafjan and Aziza al-Yousef in Paris, France, March 8, 2019. The placard reads: "Honk for women's rights". REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

 

RIYADH (Reuters) - Prominent women activists on trial in Saudi Arabia told a court on Wednesday they had been subjected to torture during more than nine months of detention, sources familiar with the matter said, in a case that has sharpened Western criticism of the kingdom.

 

The hearing, in which the women face charges related to human rights work and contacts with foreign journalists and diplomats, has drawn global attention after last year's murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

 

Those on trial include rights campaigner Loujain al-Hathloul, university professor Hatoon al-Fassi, blogger Eman al-Nafjan and academic Aziza al-Yousef, who is in her 60s.

 

Sitting near their families inside Riyadh's criminal court, some of the women described to a three-judge panel the mistreatment they had experienced, the sources said.

 

At least three of the women, including Hathloul, were held in solitary confinement for months and subjected to abuse including electric shocks, flogging, and sexual assault, rights groups have said.

 

Hathloul's siblings allege that Saud al-Qahtani, a top adviser to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was present during some of the torture sessions and threatened to rape and kill her.

 

The Saudi public prosecutor has said his office investigated the allegations and concluded they were false. Reuters has been unable to reach Qahtani since he was fired in October over the Khashoggi murder.

 

"He's the one who should be in court today, not my sister," Walid al-Hathloul told CNN after Wednesday's session.

 

Loujain asked for another month to respond to the charges after being granted only two hours with a lawyer to prepare, Walid added. There was no immediate response from the court.

 

The health of another woman, Nouf Abdelaziz, has deteriorated recently, London-based Saudi rights group ALQST reported this week, though the reason was unclear. One source said she had not appeared in court.

 

Western diplomats and media, including Reuters, were denied entry to the hearing and escorted from the building, despite petitioning to attend amid global scrutiny of the case.

 

Three dozen countries, including all 28 EU members, Canada and Australia, have called on Riyadh to free the activists. British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and his U.S. counterpart both raised the issue during recent visits to the kingdom.

 

Nine prominent U.S. senators wrote a public letter last week asking King Salman to immediately release of prisoners held on "dubious charges related to their activism", citing many of the women currently on trial.

 

It remains to be seen if Riyadh will bend to international pressure - with the women possibly receiving acquittals or pardons - or pursue harsh sentences in a case critics say has revealed the limits of the crown prince's promises to modernise Saudi Arabia.

 

SENDING A MESSAGE

Some of the charges against the women fall under part of the kingdom's cybercrime law stipulating jail sentences of up to five years, according to rights groups.

 

Those against Hathloul include communicating with 15 to 20 foreign journalists in Saudi Arabia, attempting to apply for a job at the United Nations, and attending digital privacy training, her brother has said.

 

The public prosecutor said last May that some of the women, along with several men, had been arrested on suspicion of harming Saudi interests and offering support to hostile elements abroad. State-backed media labelled some of them as traitors and "agents of embassies", irritating Western allies.

 

The detentions happened weeks before a ban on women driving cars in the conservative kingdom was lifted under efforts to relax social rules and boost the economy.

 

Activists and diplomats have speculated that may have been meant as a message to activists not to push demands out of sync with the government's own agenda, but the crown prince has denied that, accusing the women of working for Qatari and Iranian intelligence.

 

Dozens of other activists, intellectuals and clerics have been arrested separately in the past two years in an apparent bid to stamp out possible opposition.

 

The crown prince has courted the West to support ambitious economic and social reforms, but his reputation was tarnished when Saudi agents killed Khashoggi at the kingdom's Istanbul consulate, sparking an international furore.

 

(Writing by Stephen Kalin; Editing by Catherine Evans)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2019-03-28
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1 hour ago, helloagain said:

Do not fly on their airlines. 

The airline is Saudia and you are only likely to fly with them if you are flying into the country. As a non-Saudi who is not a diplomat, do not have a work permit or not invited to go there or who is not a Muslim with a permit to go on the Haj, you are unlikely to get permission to go into the country. So unlikely to ever fly on that airline.

 

The obvious way in which you can hurt Saudi Arabia is to boycott their oil. The trouble is that the USA is unlikely to ever agree to that. And anyway, oil is a fluid commodity in more senses than one - so easy to sell on the spot market and can be sold off tankers, as the IS terrorists were able to do at a cut price. It is the easiest commodity to sanction bust.

 

You can culturally isolate them by making them unwelcome in places where they want to go - New York, London, Paris etc. In effect, you stop the elite from enjoying their wealth and prestige abroad. You keep the pressure on them from all sides. Yes, they can put pressure on countries with their money and access to the holy sites for Muslims. But if this program is used in an intelligent way by Western countries and advised by specialists in Arab culture, you may eventually move them in a direction that is more civilized. But we will have to wait until there is a change of president in the USA before such a policy becomes possible.

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the most backward country on earth. land of bigots.

bigot Wahhabi so called muslim. wahhabism is a plague to humanity and islam.

a perverted version of islam created for more rant.

 

and Saudi Arabia is surprisingly a US ally! and US just watches all those human rights abuses but no problems on giving atomic bomb secrets to Saudi Arabia aka Bigotland!!

when same abuses happen in other countries, US is so vocal and they criticize and even threaten with sanctions.

When it comes to Bigot Saudi Arabia, they do nothing!! 

so what do US citizens think about the close ties of US with Saudi Arabia? if i was an murrican, sure i feel super ashamed.

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What to Know About Absher, Saudi Arabia's Controversial 'Woman-Tracking' App

The iTunes and Google Play stores freely host an app called Absher, run by the Saudi government that tracks women and stops them leaving the country 

http://time.com/5532221/absher-saudi-arabia-what-to-know/

"With the app, men can input a woman’s name and passport number. They can then decide how many trips women can take, how long women can travel for, and whether to cancel a woman’s permission to travel. The app even offers real-time SMS updates that detail when women travel"

https://www.androidauthority.com/apple-google-saudi-arabia-app-952686/

Absher-1-840x662.jpg

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I am absolutely thrilled that the Saudis and especially MBS, are finally getting the bad press, bad rap, and negative attention they so rightfully deserve. They are a despot nation. And MBS is a serial killing gangster, dressed up as a prince. Any nation that practices Sharia law, does not deserve our attention, support or respect. It is a system run by very small, thin skinned men, who are insecure, have no inner strength, no insight, no wisdom, no respect for women, and no sense of themselves, nor comfort within their own skins. Any faith, or system that punishes people for being gay or lesbian, with death, cuts off someone's hand for stealing a loaf of bread when they are hungry, or stones a woman to death for having an affair, is a system that does not belong in the modern world, and we must do everything in our power to resist them, shame them, and avoid supporting them.

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