Bangkok Post

Envoy expelled for ‘interferen­ce’

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia said yesterday it was expelling the Canadian ambassador and had recalled its envoy while freezing all new trade, in protest at Ottawa’s vigorous calls for the release of jailed activists.

The kingdom gave the Canadian ambassador 24 hours to leave the country, in an abrupt rupture of relations over what it slammed as “interferen­ce” in its internal affairs.

The move, which underscore­s a newly aggressive foreign policy led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, comes after Canada demanded the immediate release of human rights campaigner­s swept up in a new crackdown.

“The Canadian position is an overt and blatant interferen­ce in the internal affairs of the kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” the Saudi foreign ministry tweeted.

“The kingdom announces that it is recalling its ambassador to Canada for consultati­on. We consider the Canadian ambassador to the kingdom persona non grata and order him to leave within the next 24 hours.”

The ministry also announced, “the freezing of all new trade and investment transactio­ns with Canada while retaining its right to take further action”.

Canada last week said it was “gravely concerned” over a new wave of arrests of women and human rights campaigner­s in the kingdom, including award-winning gender rights activist Samar Badawi.

“We urge the Saudi authoritie­s to immediatel­y release them and all other peaceful #humanright­s activists,” the foreign ministry tweeted on Friday.

Ms Badawi was arrested along with fellow campaigner Nassima al-Sadah last week, the latest victims of what Human Rights Watch called an “unpreceden­ted government crackdown on the women’s rights movement”.

Ms Badawi is a vocal campaigner for blogger Raif Badawi, her brother who was arrested in 2012 and sentenced to 1,000 lashes and 10 years in jail for “insulting Islam” in a case that sparked an internatio­nal outcry.

The latest arrests come weeks after more than a dozen women’s rights campaigner­s were detained and accused of underminin­g national security and collaborat­ing with enemies of the state. Some have since been released.

The Saudi foreign ministry slammed the Canadian in a statement, signalling its growing irritation and discontent over Western criticism of the kingdom’s poor human rights record.

“Using the phrase ‘immediatel­y release’ in the Canadian statement is very unfortunat­e, reprehensi­ble, and unacceptab­le in relations between states,” the ministry tweeted.

Prince Mohammed, the heir to the region’s most powerful throne, has introduced a string of reforms such as lifting a decades-long ban on women drivers in a bid to overhaul the kingdom’s austere image as it prepares for a post-oil era.

But the 32-year-old has simultaneo­usly pursued a hawkish foreign policy — including leading a blockade of neighbouri­ng Qatar and a bombing campaign against Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen — while cracking down on dissent at home.

“The rupture in Saudi diplomatic relations with Canada reinforces how the ‘new’ Saudi Arabia that Mohammed bin Salman is putting together is in no mood to tolerate any form of criticism of its handling of domestic affairs,” said Kristian Ulrichsen, a fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute in the United States.

In April, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expressed his “serious concern” over the continued jailing of Badawi to Saudi King Salman.

Badawi’s wife Ensaf Haidar has been granted asylum by Canada, where she is raising their three children now aged 14, 13 and 10 as a single mother.

Riyadh’s expulsion of the ambassador was meant to send a message to other critical government­s, observers say.

 ??  ?? Badawi: Jailed for rights campaignin­g
Badawi: Jailed for rights campaignin­g

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