The Phnom Penh Post

S Arabia detains activists ahead of driving ban lift

- Alison Tahmizian Meuse

SAUDI authoritie­s have arrested seven prominent women’s rights advocates, dividing public opinion just weeks before the kingdom is set to lift its driving ban on women.

Without naming those detained, Saudi Arabia’s state security apparatus said seven had been arrested for “attempting to undermine the security and stability of the kingdom . . . and to erode national unity”.

“Work is still underway to identify everyone involved” and take legal measures against them, according to a security spokesman quoted on Saturday by state news agency SPA.

Those arrested are facing accusation­s including making “suspicious contact with foreign parties”, providing financial support to “hostile elements abroad” and recruiting government workers.

The crackdown comes even as the kingdom breaks with longheld restrictio­ns on women and the mixing of the genders, with its driving ban on women slated to end June 24. But there were warnings that Riyadh would not tolerate those pushing for change outside its authority.

Activists told Human Rights Watch that in September 2017, on the same day authoritie­s announced the driving ban would be lifted, the Royal Court had called up prominent activists and warned them not to speak to the media.

With a front page reading “Your betrayals have failed”, AlJazirah named two of those arrested as activists Loujain alHathloul and Aziza al-Yousef.

On Twitter – a popular tool of communicat­ion for Saudi Arabia’s young population – opinions were sharply divided.

“No place for traitors among us,” SaudiNews5­0 wrote. The news website’s post also carried images of five of those detained: Hathloul, Yousef, Eman al-Nafjan, Mohammed al-Rabiya and lawyer Ibrahim al-Madmyegh.

Supporters of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, seen as the architect behind a succession of social reforms emanating from Riyadh, backed the sweep.

Referring to the detainees as “agents of the embassies”, political analyst Naif al-Asaker tweeted that anyone who did not support their arrest was either a “covert partner” or “ignorant”.

Amnesty condemned the commentary of the arrests as a “chilling smear campaign” and an “extremely worrying developmen­t for women human rights defenders” in the country.

For other Saudis, the treatment of trailblaze­rs who fought for many of the reforms now coming to fruition was a shock.

“This round of arrests was strictly targeting Saudi feminism,” tweeted Saudi-American activist Nora Abdulkarim.

Abdullah al-Aoudh, a Saudieduca­ted scholar at Yale Law, said the charges did not add up.

“For those who consider these arrests to be in defence of religion and religious scholars, I’d just like to remind you that the scholars and intellectu­als of the country are in jail . . . in the same scenario,” he tweeted.

 ?? FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP ?? A Saudi woman test drives a car during an automotive exhibition for women in the capital Riyadh on May 13.
FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP A Saudi woman test drives a car during an automotive exhibition for women in the capital Riyadh on May 13.
 ?? AFP ?? A woman casts her vote at a polling station in Ciri, northern Burundi, on Thursday during a referendum on constituti­onal reforms.
AFP A woman casts her vote at a polling station in Ciri, northern Burundi, on Thursday during a referendum on constituti­onal reforms.

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