US citizen detained while performing Umrah

Salem of Yemeni origin was taken into custody after getting into a dispute with security officials, says family


AFP November 13, 2022
Suspects detained during a Ramadan crackdown in Makkah. PHOTO: AFP

A US citizen has been detained in Saudi Arabia after getting into a dispute with security officials while performing the Umrah pilgrimage, a family spokesperson told AFP on Sunday.

Mohamad Salem was taken into custody on November 1 and has been transferred to a maximum-security facility typically used for high-profile political prisoners and suspected terrorists, Abdallah Moughni said by phone from the US state of Michigan, where Salem lives.

He is one of several Americans who have recently run afoul of Saudi authorities, amid heightened tensions between the two long-time partners over global oil supply.

Salem, a 63-year-old of Yemeni origin, travelled to Saudi Arabia with two of his sons to perform the Umrah pilgrimage at the Grand Mosque in Makkah, Moughni said.

While in line, he got into a verbal altercation with security officials who separated him from his sons.

Later, two men approached him, saying they were from Libya and asking what happened.

The two men turned out to be undercover Saudi agents, and Salem was detained, Moughni said.

Saudi officials and the US embassy in Riyadh did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Moughni said the embassy had provided Salem's family with a list of possible lawyers but so far none had agreed to take the case.

Salem's relatives do not know whether he has been charged.

Last month, the family of Saad Ibrahim Almadi, a 72-year-old US citizen of Saudi origin, said he had received a 16-year prison sentence apparently because of Twitter posts on topics including the war in Yemen and the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

This week, Carly Morris, an American woman who has publicly accused her Saudi ex-husband of trapping their daughter in the kingdom under so-called guardianship laws, was briefly detained but then released.

Moughni told AFP he hoped that political disagreements between Riyadh and Washington would not affect how Salem is treated.

The two countries have been at odds over Saudi Arabia's push to cut oil production, which the White House has said amounts to siding with Russia in the Ukraine war.

"Hopefully the citizens don't have to suffer for the words of the government," Moughni said.

"We are allies at the end of the day. And at some point there needs to be some type of benefit to being an ally."

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