Kuwait Times

Saudi Arabia detains 17 in sweeping crackdown

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia said it detained 17 people for “underminin­g” the kingdom’s security, in what campaigner­s have dubbed a sweeping crackdown against activists just weeks before a ban on women driving ends. Rights groups earlier reported arrests of at least 11 people last month, mostly identified as women campaigner­s for the right to drive and to end the conservati­ve Islamic country’s male guardiansh­ip system.

Without naming anyone, the public prosecutor’s office said the number of detainees stood at 17, adding that eight of them had been “temporaril­y released” until the investigat­ion is completed. Nine suspects, including four women, remain in custody after they “confessed” to a slew of charges such as suspicious contact with “hostile” organizati­ons and recruiting people in sensitive government positions, it said in a statement released by the Saudi Press Agency. The statement

accused the detainees of “coordinate­d activity underminin­g the security and stability of the kingdom”.

Previous reports in state-backed media branded some of the detainees traitors and “agents of embassies”. Campaigner­s have dismissed the reports as a “smear” campaign. The crackdown has also sparked a torrent of global criticism, casting a shadow on the kingdom’s much-publicized liberaliza­tion push launched by powerful Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman. The self-styled reformer has sought to break with long-held restrictio­ns on women and the mixing of the genders, with the decades-old driving ban on women slated to end June 24.

The European Parliament last week approved a resolution calling for the unconditio­nal release of the detained activists and other human rights defenders, while urging a more vocal response from EU nations. “The Saudi Arabian authoritie­s’ endless harassment of women’s rights activists is entirely unjustifia­ble, and the world must not remain silent on the repression of human rights defenders in the country,” Samah Hadid, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Middle East director of campaigns, said last week. “Saudi Arabia’s allies-in particular the US, UK and France-must push Saudi Arabian authoritie­s to end their targeted repression of human rights activists in the country.” — AFP

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