Shanghai Daily

Female Saudi activist faces anti-terrorism court

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SAUDI authoritie­s have transferre­d the trial of jailed activist

Loujain al-Hathloul to an antiterror­ism court, her family said on Wednesday, raising the prospect of a lengthy prison sentence despite internatio­nal pressure for her release.

Hathloul, 31, was arrested in May 2018 with about a dozen other women activists just weeks before the historic lifting of a decades-long ban on female drivers, a reform they had long campaigned for.

Hathloul, who recently went on a twoweek hunger strike, was visibly “weak” and “shaking uncontroll­ably” when she appeared at Riyadh’s criminal court, where she has been tried since March 2019 in closeddoor sessions, her sister Lina Hathloul said.

The judge announced his court lacked jurisdicti­on and sent the case to the Specialise­d Criminal Court, or the anti-terrorism court,

Lina said.

“How is it possible for the judge to realize the court lacks jurisdicti­on after dealing with the case for 1 year and 8 months?” She wrote on Twitter.

There was no comment from officials in Saudi Arabia.

Hathloul read out her four-page defense in Wednesday’s hearing, her other sister Alia al-Hathloul said on Twitter.

Her siblings are based outside the kingdom, but some other family were said to be present in court.

The Specialise­d Criminal Court was establishe­d in 2008 to handle terrorismr­elated cases. But it has been widely used to try political dissidents and human rights activists.

In a report this year, Amnesty Internatio­nal said the secretive court was used to silence critical voices under the cover of fighting terrorism. “Saudi authoritie­s could have decided to end the two-year nightmare for brave human rights defender Loujain al-Hathloul,” Lynn Maalouf said in a statement.

Hathloul began a hunger strike in prison on October 26 to demand regular contact with her family, but felt compeled to end it two weeks later, her siblings said.

“She was being woken up by the guards every two hours, day and night, as a brutal tactic to break her,” Amnesty said on Twitter, citing the activist’s family.

 ??  ?? Loujain al- Hathloul
Loujain al- Hathloul

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