Middle East

More women’s rights activists arrested as Saudi crackdown continues

Activists who fought to end Saudi Arabia's driving ban for women are being arrested (Reuters)

Saudi Arabias crackdown on critical activists has widened as authorities arrested three more womens rights campaigners, international rights watchdogs said on Tuesday.

Saudi authorities have now picked up at least 11 activists over the past week, most of them involved in campaigns to end male guardianship of women and a ban on women driving, which will be lifted in June.

Amnesty International told Reuters that seven women and two men were now being held, in addition to "one unidentified activist". Human Rights Watch confirmed that total. One activist said 11 people had been arrested – seven women and four men.

"Amnesty International is worried about reports of further arrests of individuals … and we call on the authorities to reveal the whereabouts of these individuals and reveal the charges against them," said Samah Hadid, Amnesty's Middle East Director of Campaigns.

Mohammed bin Salman wants all the credit for any kind of success story

Madawi al-Rasheed, London School of Economics

The lifting of the driving ban has been lauded as a sign of progress being made under a campaign of reforms led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman but the arrests have highlighted an accompanying crackdown on dissent.

Acknowledging the arrests of seven activists last week, the Saudi government accused them of suspicious contacts with foreign entities and offering financial support to "enemies overseas" while warning they would identify others involved.

"These actions are inconsistent with messages of reform on which Western support for Vision 2030 is based," one diplomat said, referring to Saudi Arabia's ambitious social and economic reform agenda.

"These actions will have consequences."

Official criticism by foreign governments, though, has been scant. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has courted Western allies to support his reforms. Hundreds of billions of dollars of investments were discussed during his recent trips to the United States and Europe.

Government spokesmen were not immediately available for comment on the latest reports.

"It's an act to stifle any kind of mobilisation in Saudi Arabia that comes from the grassroots level," said Madawi al-Rasheed, visiting professor at the London School of Economics.


Saudi women have been attending driving schools before the ban is lifted (Reuters)

"Mohammed bin Salman wants all the credit for any kind of success story; he wants to tell the world and the audience that the rights of Saudi women and every Saudi citizen come from him."</span>

Of the 10 detainees, Amnesty has only publicly identified four women – Eman al-Nafjan, Loujain al-Hathloul, Aziza al-Yousef and Aisha al-Manea, and two men as Ibrahim Modeimigh and Mohammed al-Rabea.

Manea is a longtime women's rights defender, campaigning for women's right to drive since the 1990s. Both Nafjan and Yousef participated in a protest against the driving ban in 2013.

Yousef also authored a petition in 2016 seeking to end male guardianship, which Nafjan and Hathloul signed. Hathloul was previously detained at least twice for her activism.

Women who previously participated in protests against the driving ban told Reuters last year that two dozen activists had received phone calls instructing them not to comment on the decree lifting it. Some of those arrested this week nonetheless continued to speak out.

One activist, speaking on condition of anonymity, said terrified colleagues were shutting their social media accounts. Another warned: "To end the feminist movement risks closing the space for civil rights activism altogether."

Original Article

[contf]
[contfnew]

middle east eye

[contfnewc]
[contfnewc]

Related Articles

Back to top button