The Borneo Post (Sabah)

In Saudi trial, detained women speak of torture, abuse

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RIYADH: Saudi women activists detained for almost a year offered their defence at an emotionall­y charged hearing on Wednesday, alleging torture and sexual harassment during interrogat­ion, courtroom sources said.

Eleven women responded to charges that rights groups say include contact with internatio­nal media and human rights groups, in the second hearing of a highprofil­e trial that foreign reporters and diplomats are barred from attending.

Some of them wept and consoled each other and their family members gathered before a three-judge panel in Riyadh’s criminal court as they accused interrogat­ors of subjecting them to electric shocks and flogging and groping them in detention, two people with access to the trial told AFP.

At least one of the detained women tried to commit suicide following her mistreatme­nt, a close relative said.

The government, facing intense internatio­nal scrutiny of its human rights record, denies the women were tortured or harassed.

The women, including prominent activist Loujain al-Hathloul, blogger Eman alNafjan and university professor Hatoon al-Fassi, were detained last summer in a sweeping crackdown on campaigner­s just before the historic lifting of a decades-long ban on female motorists.

The women had long campaigned for the right to drive and to abolish the restrictiv­e guardiansh­ip system that gives male relatives arbitrary authority over women.

Their trial has intensifie­d criticism of the kingdom over human rights following global outrage over journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s murder by Saudi agents last October.

Loujain’s brother and sister, based overseas, have alleged that Saud al-Qahtani, a top advisor to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman who was fired over Khashoggi’s killing, oversaw the torture.

“The top adviser of the prince was threatenin­g to rape my sister, kill her, cut her body into pieces,” Walid al-Hathloul, Loujain’s brother, told CNN. — AFP

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