The Niagara Falls Review

Advocates fight to free Badawi from prison

Blogger’s allies say they must ‘intensify’ efforts ahead of next year’s G20 meeting

- MORGAN LOWRIE

MONTREAL — More than seven years after Raif Badawi was thrown into prison, lawyers and allies of the Saudi blogger are increasing­ly lobbying foreign government­s in an effort to secure his release as Saudi Arabia prepares to host next year’s G20 meeting.

Irwin Cotler, a human rights lawyer and former federal justice minister who represents the family internatio­nally, says advocates for Badawi have recently been meeting with foreign government­s, UN representa­tives and others to encourage them to call for the release of Badawi, his sister Samar, their former lawyer Waleed Abulkhair and other imprisoned human rights defenders.

Cotler sat down with The Canadian Press to discuss the intensifyi­ng effort to free the 35-year-old Badawi, who was arrested on June 17, 2012, and was later sentenced to 1,000 lashes and 10 years in jail for his online criticism of Saudi clerics.

Cotler said it is urgent “to both internatio­nalize and intensify our advocacy” as Saudi Arabia chairs the G20 ahead of the meeting in Riyadh in November 2020.

That effort appeared to yield results last month when U.S. Vice-President Mike Pence called on Saudi Arabia to free Badawi as well as three other jailed dissidents.

The four dissidents, Pence said, “have stood in defence of religious liberty and the exercise of their faith despite unimaginab­le pressure, and the American people stand with them.”

Pence’s statement followed one by European Parliament Vice President Heidi Hautala in June, which describes Badawi’s sentence as “unjust, disproport­ionate and arbitrary” and urged the Saudi government to free him. The European Union awarded Badawi the Sakharov Prize, its top human rights award, in 2015.

Cotler sees significan­t progress in the year since Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland’s tweet calling for the release of Raif and Samar Badawi sparked a diplomatic spat with Saudi Arabia. (While neither prisoner is a Canadian citizen, Raif Badawi’s wife and three children live in Sherbrooke, Que., and were granted citizenshi­p last year.)

The fallout from the tweet saw Saudi Arabia suspend diplomatic ties, halt investment and Canadian imports and threaten to shut down scholarshi­ps for its citizens studying in Canada. “Not one democracy came to Canada’s defence,” Cotler said.

He said that while he disagreed with Saudi Arabia being awarded G20 host duties, he believes the Riyadh summit could be an opportunit­y to increase the pressure to free the prisoners — and give Saudi Arabia the chance to prove it can be a “credible” host.

“If the crown prince wants to be taken seriously, if Saudi Arabia wants to be seen seriously as chair of the G20, he can’t call for reforms — which we support — regarding women, such as the right to drive, then imprison the same women who called for the reforms.”

He said Pence’s statement came after he and Badawi’s wife, Ensaf Haidar, travelled to Washington earlier this year to meet with lawmakers and the United States Commission on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom, which has contacts with the vice-president.

Cotler believes the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was killed after entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last October, was a “wake-up call” for democracie­s that had previously hesitated to speak up against the Saudi regime.

More than eight months after Khashoggi’s death, a UN special rapporteur released a report saying there was “credible evidence” to warrant further investigat­ion and financial sanctions against Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Efforts by Badawi’s advocates in the coming weeks and months include a renewed applicatio­n for clemency, which argues that a pardon would be in line with Saudi law.

Canada, too, has a part to play, says Cotler, who was Liberal justice minister from 2003-06. He plans to once again call on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to grant Canadian citizenshi­p to Badawi, which would ensure he could receive visits and has “diplomatic protection that is not now authorized.”

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ensaf Haidar, wife of Raif Badawi, stands next to a poster of a book of articles written by the imprisoned Saudi blogger.
PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS Ensaf Haidar, wife of Raif Badawi, stands next to a poster of a book of articles written by the imprisoned Saudi blogger.

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