The Borneo Post

Saudi activist’s suspended sentence paves way for early release

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RIYADH: A Saudi court Monday handed prominent activist Loujain al-Hathloul a prison term of five years and eight months for terrorism-related crimes, but a partially suspended sentence will allow her release within months, relatives said.

Hathloul, 31, was arrested in May 2018 with about a dozen other women activists just weeks before the historic lifting of a decades-long ban on female drivers, a reform they had long campaigned for, sparking a torrent of internatio­nal criticism.

A suspension of half her sentence follows intense global pressure for her release and comes ahead of next month’s inaugurati­on of US Presidente­lect Joe Biden, who has pledged a tough stance on the kingdom over human rights after it largely got a free pass under President Donald Trump.

The terrorism court handed Hathloul a prison term of five years and eight months, but suspended two years and 10 months of the sentence “if she does not commit any crime” within the next three years, the pro-government online outlet Sabq and other media allowed to attend her trial cited the court as saying. The women’s rights activist was convicted of cooperatin­g with entities criminalis­ed by the kingdom’s anti-terrorism law, inciting regime change and seeking to disrupt public order, they added.

“A suspension of 2 years and 10 months in addition to the time already served (since May 2018) would see her (released) in approximat­ely two months,” Lina al-Hathloul, the activist’s sister, wrote on Twitter. A source close to her family and campaign groups including the Londonbase­d ALQST said she would be released by March next year.

Another detained woman activist, Maya’a al-Zahrani, was given an identical sentence for a similar list of charges, local media reported, but it was unclear when she will be set free.

The court banned Hathloul from leaving the kingdom for five years, her relatives said.

The activist’s Toronto-based brother, Walid, denounced her trial as a “sham” and “politicall­y motivated”.

“The moment (Hathloul) saw the verdict she started crying because... she had been labelled as a terrorist,” Walid told AFP.

“We are going to be appealing the verdict even though ( we) don’t have any hope from the Saudi judicial system.” A motion to appeal can also be filed within a month by the public prosecutor, who Hathloul’s family said had sought a 20-year jail term for her.

The Geneva-based UN Human Rights office described Hathloul’s conviction and sentence after she was “arbitraril­y” detained since 2018 as “deeply troubling”.

“We understand early release is possible, and strongly encourage it as matter of urgency,” it said on Twitter.

France’s foreign ministry said it reiterated its call for Hathloul’s “quick release”, a view echoed by Germany’s human rights commission­er Barbel Kofler.

The Trump administra­tion was more low-key with the deputy State Department spokesman, Cale Brown, tweeting the United States was “concerned” and adding, “We look forward to her anticipate­d early release in 2021.”

Biden has pledged to intensify scrutiny of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s human rights failings. He is expected to push the kingdom to release dual US-Saudi citizens, activists and royal family members, many of whom are detained without any formal charges.

After being tried in Riyadh’s criminal court, Hathloul’s trial was transferre­d last month to the Specialise­d Criminal Court, or the anti-terrorism court, which campaigner­s say is used to silence critical voices under the cover of fighting terrorism. – AFP

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