Saudi clerics call for fair trial of detained militants

At least 100 clerics sign petition calling for fair hearings and better treatment of women prisoners.


Reuters January 14, 2013
Clerics decry extended detentions without trials and political victimisations under pretense of militancy. ILLUSTRATION: JAMAL KHURSHID

JEDDAH: More than 100 Saudi clerics have signed a petition calling for fair hearings for prisoners held on security grounds in the conservative kingdom, which has arrested thousands of people in a campaign against militants.

The petition, prompted by the detention earlier this month of 11 women who staged a protest to demand the release of jailed relatives, also called on the authorities to treat women prisoners properly.

Rights groups say thousands have been detained in the name of security in Saudi Arabia, many of them imprisoned without a fair hearing or held for long periods without trial. They say some were detained merely for demanding political change.

The authorities deny holding political prisoners and say all those detained for reasons of security are suspected militants. They said over 5,000 people were detained last year in a crackdown on the militants and most had already been tried.

Conservative Sunni Muslim clerics hold powerful positions in Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam. However, some have also opposed the ruling family on issues ranging from social reform to the campaign against radicals.

The 100 clerics who signed the petition are from Qassim, one of the most conservative parts of Saudi Arabia and the heartland of its austere Wahhabi school of Sunni Islam.

Activists familiar with the petition said those who signed it were from a variety of ideological backgrounds, suggesting they may include both conservatives and comparative liberals.

"The issue of detainees has become the community's issue," the petition read. "The releases occurring are less than the (number) expected, which has resulted in growing frustration among the people."

"This has become evident through the protests and sit-ins that are increasing in number and widening in scope and intensifying in tone... It would be wise to resolve this issue quickly," it added.

The protest in which the 11 women were detained on January 5, 2013 is the latest in a string of small-scale demonstrations and sit-ins outside government offices in Qassim and the capital Riyadh over the past 18 months.

In September the then interior minister Prince Ahmed said no further protests about detainees would be tolerated.

All protests in Saudi Arabia, the world's top oil exporter, are illegal. The government says it does not mistreat prisoners.

The petition said Islam forbids the mistreatment of women. The detention of women is particularly sensitive in more conservative parts of Saudi Arabia, such as Qassim.

The crackdown against militants came in response to a series of attacks by al Qaeda on government and Western targets from 2003 to 2005. The militants were crushed inside the kingdom but some fled to Yemen where they set up a new wing of al Qaeda that swore to bring down the Saudi ruling family.

COMMENTS (2)

Sonya | 11 years ago | Reply

These undemocratic regimes in Saudi and elsewhere in the Middle East are basically ruthless dictatorships in the garb of ‘Islamic’ rule or benevolent monarchy. They have survived so long solely due to either oil money, government terror on it’s own people and support from USA and UK.

What befuddles me is why does Pakistan, a far more populous, far more democractic and indeed far smarter and modern act like mere minions of the Saudis and other arabs? Pakistan must forcefully and clearly voice it’s South Asian heritage, history and modern liberal democratic culture; and shed all pretenses of following ‘Arab leadership’ because there is none!!

anwar | 11 years ago | Reply

A nation that beheads a 16 year old girl can do anything but be fair...

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