Houston Chronicle

Activists: Saudi dissent crackdown stepped up

- By Vivian Yee

BEIRUT — Saudi Arabia’s longrunnin­g drive to muzzle dissent has escalated again in recent weeks with the arrests of several journalist­s, writers and academics who had not vocally criticized the government in years, according to two rights groups that monitor the kingdom.

At least eight people have been detained since Nov. 16, the rights groups said.

Since Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman became Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader in 2017, the government has arrested dozens of activists, bloggers and others perceived as political opponents, showing almost zero tolerance for dissent even in the face of internatio­nal condemnati­ons of the crackdown.

Saudi Arabia is preparing for another moment in the internatio­nal eye next month, when it is expected to take public its flagship state-owned oil company,

Saudi Aramco, in what could be the largest initial public offering ever. But the recent detentions indicate that the prince appears determined to stay the course, as he did after widespread rebukes over the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi last year, the kingdom’s military campaign in Yemen and the detentions of several women’s rights activists.

Activists said the recent arrests undermined Crown Prince Mohammed’s efforts to introduce social changes to the kingdom — or, at least, the internatio­nal image boost they have given him. Along with diversifyi­ng the economy, the prince aims to open up what is still a highly traditiona­l society by encouragin­g concerts and movie theaters, promoting tourism, and granting women more freedoms, such as the right to drive.

“It’s very clear now that the Saudi government hasn’t learned any lessons from the internatio­nal pressure,” said Yahya Assiri, the director of ALQST, one of the rights groups. “The only thing they’ve learned is that they can avoid internatio­nal pressure with sports and entertainm­ent and PR campaigns.”

The people arrested recently were “not activists, and they haven’t been critical for many years,” he said. “It’s just repression.”

Assiri said that many of those arrested were friends or acquaintan­ces who moved in the same intellectu­al circles. But it was unclear why some of the others were arrested, the groups said.

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