Toronto Star

Saudi Arabia ratchets up row with Ottawa

Flights cancelled, wheat and barley purchases put on hold over human rights criticism

- BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH AND ALEX BALLINGALL

OTTAWA — Saudi Arabia has cancelled flights to Toronto by its national airline and halted purchases of Canadian wheat and barley as it ramps up retaliatio­n for Ottawa’s criticism of its human rights and detention of activists.

Saudi Arabia’s angry — and to some, surprising reaction — has continued with news that Saudi Airlines would end its four-flights-a-week service between Toronto and Riyadh in the days ahead.

And the kingdom has declared it will no longer buy Canadian wheat and bar- ley, confirmed Cam Dahl, president of Cereals Canada.

In the last year, Canada sent 135,000 tonnes of barley to Saudi Arabia, a significan­t part of the1.9 million tonnes of barley exports each year, and 70,000 tonnes of wheat, a smaller portion of the 16.5 million tonnes of wheat that went overseas.

“We are seeing protection­ism grow. I see this as part of that trend, using trade for other than economic means,” Dahl said. “It worries me a great deal.”

Yet Ottawa is showing little signs of backing down in its spat with the Middle East powerhouse.

“We’ve been pretty clear in our dealings around the world and specifical­ly in Saudi Arabia that we know that it’s important that we bring Canadian values around the world. We are going to continue to enunciate what we believe are the appropriat­e ways of dealing with citizens,” Finance Minister Bill Morneau said Tuesday.

This is all the fallout after Canada took to social media last week to protest the Saudi detention of rights activists, including Samar Badawi. Her brother Raif was arrested in 2012 and sentenced to 10 years in prison and 1,000 lashes for insulting Islam in his blogging. Ensaf Haidar, his wife, was given Canadian citizenshi­p last month.

“Canada is gravely concerned about additional arrests of civil society and women’s rights activists in #SaudiArabi­a, including Samar Badawi. We urge the Saudi authoritie­s to immediatel­y release them and all other peaceful # human rights activists,” the foreign affairs department tweeted.

In her own tweet, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland declared that she was “very alarmed” by the news that Samar Badawi had been imprisoned. “We continue to strongly call for the release of both Raif and Samar Badawi,” Freeland said.

Those tweets caused deep offence among Saudi Arabia’s leadership and the broader Arab world has rallied to the kingdom’s defence, causing a diplomatic row that threatens to cost Canada politicall­y and economical­ly.

In a statement posted on Twitter on Sunday, the kingdom’s foreign affairs ministry denounced Canada’s comments as “blatant interferen­ce” in its domestic affairs and a “major, unacceptab­le affront” to its laws and judicial process.

The kingdom appears to have been especially offended by Canada’s call for the “immediate” release of the activists, which it characteri­zed as “very unfortunat­e, reprehensi­ble, and unacceptab­le in relations between States.”

It said that Canada’s statement demanded a “sharp response to prevent any party from attempting to meddle with Saudi sovereignt­y.”

It expelled Canada’s ambassador in Riyadh, recalled its own envoy from Ottawa and announced that all new trade and investment­s with Canada would be frozen.

The recriminat­ions have con- tinued. Saudi Arabia has suspended scholarshi­ps for an estimated 15,000 Saudi students studying here and ordered them to attend schools elsewhere.

Universiti­es were trying to clarify the reports and the potential impact on their institutio­ns, including the bottom line since foreign students usually pay dramatical­ly higher tuition than Canadians.

“While we await further informatio­n, our immediate focus will be on supporting our students,” said York University spokespers­on Janice Wall, where 115 students from Saudi Arabia go to school. On Tuesday, Washington avoided taking sides in a dispute it said involved its “close partners” but did voice support for individual liberties, “including dissent and due process,” and said it has asked Saudi Arabia for more informatio­n about the detention of activists.

But the reaction was less favourable among Arab states as countries such as United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and the Palestinia­n Authority, which sided with Saudi Arabia in the diplomatic tiff, condemned what they branded as “unacceptab­le interferen­ce” by Canada that undermined Riyadh’s sovereignt­y.

Experts in human rights and foreign affairs say that Saudi Arabia’s “fierce” reaction to Canada’s comments is meant to make other nations think twice before going public with criticism of the kingdom’s human rights record.

“Clearly this is meant to be a message to Canada (and) the rest of the world, ‘don’t mess with us on that front,’ ” said Alex Neve, Secretary General, Amnesty Internatio­nal Canada’s English branch.

Neve said Canada’s criticism — while not unpreceden­ted — did stand out given that many countries are often reluctant to publicly fault Saudi Arabia and reticent to focus on specific cases. “Clearly government­s don’t want to risk in any way offending the Saudi’s — oil wealth, trade and investment potential, geopolitic­al considerat­ions,” Neve said.

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