Arabia |
Head of al-Murrah tribe confirms Qatar revokes family’s citizenship |
2017-09-15 |
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] The head of the al-Murrah tribe in Qatar ...an emirate on the east coast of the Arabian Peninsula. It sits on some really productive gas and oil deposits, which produces the highest per capita income in the world. They piss it all away on religion, financing the Moslem Brotherhood and several al-Qaeda affiliates... , Sheikh Taleb bin Lahom bin Shreim, has confirmed that Doha has revoked his citizenship along with 54 of his relatives and warned his country’s embrace of Iran. In an interview with Al Arabiya, Sheikh Taleb said the actions of the Qatari authorities has not surprised him. "The Qatari authorities have become a source of haven for holy warriors and their sponsors, and the subject of discussion is much bigger than nationality. It is a big attack on Soddy Arabia ...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face... and the Gulf states," he told Al Arabiya. Saudi Arabia’s National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) has said that Qatar revoked the citizenships of 54 members directly related to Sheikh Taleb’s branch of the family, including 18 women and their children. "This violating all principles of human rights One man's rights are another man's existential threat. , exposing them as diasporas and displacing them, similar to an action in the past when the Qatari government itself in 2005 took action against more than 6,000 of its citizens and displaced them by withdrawing their nationality without any justification or reason consistent with international standards," NSHR said in a statement made available to Al Arabiya. |
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Arabia |
'Ignorant critics of KSA laws' slammed |
2015-03-21 |
[ARABNEWS] Grand Mufti ![]() "Whoever questions the legitimacy and independence of the Shariah justice system is either ignorant or biased." He said such claims are a "false reflection of reality." During the airing of his weekly radio program, Al-Asheikh said the comments by Margot Wallstrom last week were based on lies. The country's legal system was legitimate and independent, and based on the Qur'an and Sunnah of the Prophet (peace by upon him) said Al-Asheikh. He said the courts are impartial and provides justice for everyone. "Our religion protects everyone's rights in our country, despite the diversity of our resident population. It does not oppress anyone or discriminate between Moslem and non-Moslem." He said women are protected under the law. "Anyone who claims that women are not granted their rights is unaware of the reality on the ground. Women in our country are given access to all opportunities." He said the National Society for Human Rights and other bodies are active in ensuring this happens. Al-Asheikh said Moslems should not believe these critics because they are propagating misguided views. He was responding to Wallstrom's condemnation of the way the country's judges handled a case involving a Saudi blogger convicted of insulting Islam. Separately, GCC Secretary-General Abdullatif Al-Zayani summoned the Swedish Ambassador Dag Juhlin-Dannfelt and lodged a formal protest over the anti-Saudi tirade by Wallstrom. |
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Arabia |
90-year-old Saudi weds 15-year-old girl |
2013-01-09 |
![]() When they're defined by the state or an NGO they don't mean much... and social media activists in the kingdom. A member of the Saudi National Society for Human Rights (NSHR), urged authorities to intervene to save the child. On Twitter especially, activists criticized the parents of the girl for giving her to a man decades older than her. In an interview, the groom insisted that his marriage was "legal and correct," and that he paid a $17,500 (SAR 65,000) dowry to marry the girl, who is the daughter of a Yemeni father and Saudi mother. The 90-year-old told the story of his first night with the bride. He said she entered the bedroom before him, and she locked the door from inside so he could not enter. This, he said, made him "suspicious about some kind of conspiracy" by the girl and her mother. He vowed to sue his in-laws to give him back the girl or return him the expensive dowry. Close friends of the bride's family said she was frightened on the wedding night, and locked herself in the room for two successive days before fleeing back to her parents' home. The member of the Saudi National Association for Human Rights (NSHR), Suhaila Zein al-Abedin, urged authorities to intervene "as soon as possible to save this child from tragedy." Abedin noted that marriage in Islam must be based on mutual consent, and this was not satisfied, as demonstrated by the girl's move to lock herself in the room. She said the girl's parents were also to be held responsible for marrying their daughter to a man the age of her great grandfather. Abedin urged the establishment of a minimum age of 18 for marrying girls, saying this would pave the way for punishing violators, according to a report by al-Hayat newspaper. Jamal al-Toueiki, a psychologist, said forced marriage may subject girls to abuse and violence, and this could lead to their suicide if nothing is done to save them. |
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Arabia |
Hai'a refutes NSHR's allegations |
2012-07-04 |
[Saudi Gazette] An official source at the Commission for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice (Hai'a) has refuted allegations leveled against it by the National Society for Human Rights (NSHR). Responding to the charge that some Hai'a personnel deal roughly with detainees, he said: "The Hai'a had taken measures to correct the erratic behavior of some of its members. The organization does not condone physical and psychological abuse of anyone, regardless of the reason for detention. Every individual is entitled to fair treatment that preserves his honor and self-respect." He said such changes were more evident over the last six months. "No one has complained about being chased by the Hai'a since such acts have been criminalized. It should be understood that the Hai'a has stopped seeking the help of volunteers, especially in fieldwork. Moreover, we don't give a chance to anyone to impersonate our members as all of our field staff are required to wear the Hai'a badge," Al-Hayat newspaper quoted the source as saying. He said the public should understand that anyone without a badge does not belong to the Hai'a and the organization should not be held accountable for his actions. The source also denied accusations by the NSHR of Hai'a personnel using force to extract confessions from detainees. "We have explained a number of times that we are not law enforcers. We are only a monitoring body and when the Hai'a personnel notice something unwholesome in society we seek the help of the police to arrest the violators because law enforcement comes under their jurisdiction," said the official. He said the Hai'a rejects such malpractice because they contradict Islamic teachings. As for the accusations that Hai'a members search personal possessions such as mobile phones and laptops unjustifiably intruding into people's privacy and without search warrants, he said, "We work according to the legal guidelines and allow such search operations only in special circumstances." He also reiterated that the Hai'a personnel do not force suspects to sign reports before allowing them to read the reports. Such practices are forbidden by law, he added. The source said the Hai'a does not take any action in 90 percent of misdemeanor cases in accordance with the Islamic principle of concealing wrongful behavior except in cases involving blasphemy and atonement. "When Hai'a members discover that suspects taken into custody had no previous criminal records, we release them quickly after giving them necessary advice," he added. -- |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Dozens of Saudis held in Syria | |
2011-08-11 | |
RIYADH: Saudi citizens have been arrested in Syria for no apparent reason, a human rights official has claimed in Riyadh.
Al-Qahtani said the NSHR received a number of calls from the relatives of Saudis who were arrested while traveling in Syria. It is unfortunate that Syrian authorities arrest many Saudis because of their nationality. There are also reports of hostile treatment of Saudis and Gulf citizens, he said. He, however, said the NSHR did not have the precise number of Saudis in Syrian jails. The families of the imprisoned Saudis also do not know the locations of the jails where their relatives are being held. Even the Saudi Embassy finds it hard to locate the detained people, Al-Qahtani said. NSHR has been keeping in touch with the Saudi Embassy in Damascus to obtain precise information about the jailed Saudi citizens. However, there are also unconfirmed reports that some of the arrested Saudis were facing criminal charges against them, Al-Qahtani added. He said according to complaints received from affected families, the arrested citizens were not involved in any criminal acts and were incarcerated only because of their nationality. Unable to supply clues about the whereabouts of their relatives to the NSHR, many families expressed worry over the fate of their relatives when they did not respond to phone calls, he said. He called on Syrian authorities to either prosecute the arrested citizens or let them go free. He also demanded the authorities inform the Saudi Embassy of their locations. | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Fukushima disaster prompts GCC fears over Iranian reactor |
2011-03-19 |
[Arab News] Saudi and Kuwaiti environmentalists have expressed serious concern about the safety of Iran's nuclear reactor at Bushehr, some 250 km on the other side of the Gulf from the Saudi-Kuwait border. This follows the kabooms at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor as a result of earthquake and tsunami damage last Friday. Like the Japanese reactor, the Iranian one is built in an area of seismic activity. The concern is accentuated by the fact that while Japan has the highest standards in the world for the design and construction of buildings in earthquake zones, Iran does not. In the Bam earthquake in 2003, 30,000 people died as buildings collapsed all about them. In the one in Manjil in 1990 over 40,000 people perished. While thousands have died in Japan as a result of the tsunami on Friday, very few did so because of the earthquake. An kaboom at Bushehr would have disastrous consequences, according to Jassem Al-Awadhi, a Professor of Geology and the Environment at Kuwait University's science faculty. The outcome would be "similar to those of the Chernobyl disaster for the whole region," he said. According to Al-Awadhi, the Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research's seismological center has detected daily seismic activity in the coastal area of western Iran bordering the Gulf. "This is caused by this site being the meeting point of three continental plates -- Arabian, African and Eurasian plates," he said. He wanted to know whether ineffective International Atomic Energy Agency standards were followed in Bushehr's construction. Abu Dhabi and Dubai are the most threatened if there were an kaboom at Bushehr, given the prevailing northwesterly winds in the Gulf, but radioactive fallout could easily hit the cities and oilfield of the Eastern Province necessitating mass evacuation. Bahrain, and Qatar could also be hit. Dr Ibrahim Aref, from the forestry and environmental studies department at King Saud University in Riyadh fears it could be worse. An kaboom would affect not just the Eastern Province, he says, but the whole Kingdom. He points out that carbon deposits from the 1991 oil well fires in Kuwait were found as far away as Asir. In the 1996 Chernobyl disaster, even Iceland was affected by radioactive fallout. What also worries Aref is that few people across the Kingdom are aware of the risk, and even fewer take it seriously. "People need to be concerned," he says. "There needs to be more awareness of a possible disaster at Bushehr. If Japan which is well equipped cannot cope, why expect Iran, which is not, to be able to do so?" Contingency plans need to be made, he said. Equipment, such as breathing masks needs to be held ready in case of an emergency. All towns across the country should have equipment to monitor radioactivity. He called on Soddy Arabia and the other GCC countries to set up an inquiry into the possible consequences of an kaboom at Bushehr. Concern about safety standards at Bushehr and the potential dangers are being publicly voiced in Eastern Province, he added. "Bushehr sits on an active tectonic plate and should, God forbid, something like Japan happen there, we in Soddy Arabia's Eastern Province and in Kuwait will be the first ones to get the radiation-laden wind blast," said Abdul Aziz A. Al-Khalidi a science teacher in Alkhobar. "Weather experts have confirmed in recent articles in newspapers and websites that the wind blows in our direction from Bushehr and we are therefore quite alarmed. Nature's fury can wreak havoc any time and there are lessons to be learned from what is happening in Japan. We are therefore highly concerned about Bushehr nuclear plant," he said. Scientists should alert both the public and the government about the dangers posed by the reactor, and specifically to the Eastern Province. The head of the Saudi National Society for Human Rights, Moflih Al-Qahtani, also wants the GCC to investigate the potential dangers at Bushehr if there were an earthquake. "Should leaks take place, lives could be lost and there would be high risk of cancer" he said. Soddy Arabia and other GCC state had every right to have their concerns addressed by Iran. If necessary, the GCC should take them to the UN and the ineffective International Atomic Energy Agency. On Tuesday, Iran's diminutive President Ahmadinejad claimed that the reactor was safer than the damaged Japanese one. "All safety rules and regulations and the highest standards have been applied to the Bushehr power plant," he told Spanish television broadcaster TVE. "The security standards there are the standards of today. We have to take into account that the Japanese nuclear plants were built 40 years ago with the standards of yesterday." In fact, Bushehr was first started by German companies in 1975, then abandoned after the Iranian revolution, was seriously damaged by Iraqi bombing during the Iran-Iraq war, and is today is today in part a Russian construction. The Russians agreed to take over the project in 1995. The merging of Russian and German technologies has not been easy. After 25 years in the make, the reactor was only finally launched last August but is still not in production. Just three weeks ago, Rostom, the Russian energy company rebuilding the plant said that one of the four main cooling pump had been damaged, necessitating the remove of the fuel core, further delaying the project. Bushehr is the only reactor Iran admits to. A second plant, Bushehr II, was originally planned but has been effectively shelved. Nineteen other reactors for civil use are planned, the next being at Darkhovin, less than 100 kilometers from Basra in Iraq. Bushehr is located on the eastern edge of the Arabian Tectonic Plate that is slowly colliding with the very mobile Eurasian and Iranian Plates a short distance inland east. According to Allan Jack, a geologist with Bariq Mining, any area close to the edge of a moving tectonic plate is at major risk of increased seismic activity. Rob Willmot, an industrial electromechanical consultant said that the Japanese plant was built to withstand earthquakes and in his opinion did so. "The problem seems to be that the tsunami took out the generators supplying the pumps that power the cooling system for the reactors," he told Arab News. He added that the Fukushima Daiichi plant was built to the world's highest standards of earthquake proof construction. Willmot's observations echo the focus on cooling-system pumps. Those in the Iranian facility were "supplied to Bushehr in the 1970's and, under the current contract, Russia was obliged to integrate them into the project," Rosatom, said in a Feb. 28 statement following the pump failure three weeks ago. "To cut costs the Russians had to agree to use certain parts supplied by the Germans," said Bill Horak, chairman of the nuclear science and technology department at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York and an expert on Russian-built reactors. "The rest of the world is depending on the Russian Federation for policing the nuclear safety of this reactor," said Mark Hibbs, an expert on Iranian nuclear issues at the Carnegie Endowment for World Peace. The pump failure, he added, raised questions about the decisions the Russians made to move forward with emergency coolant system that was 30 years old. A senior engineer for a Saudi-based construction company, who requested anonymity, was less than sanguine about the quality of the work on the Bushehr plant. "We have just seen the immense power of seismic activity and its devastating effect on infrastructure", he said, "and this was in a country that has the toughest building regulations in the world and enforces them to the letter. I doubt that the Bushehr plant is built to anything like the same standards." He added that he would not want to live anywhere downwind of the facility. |
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Arabia |
NSHR confronts Jazan father over girl's right to marry |
2011-03-02 |
[Arab News] The National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) in Jazan is trying to convince a man to allow his 30-year-old daughter to marry. Ahmad Al-Bahkali, director of the Jazan branch of the NSHR, said the father has no valid reason to stop his daughter from getting married. He added that the father's abuse and torture had even forced her to attempt suicide. The woman set herself on fire and suffered serious burns after the father turned two suitors away. Al-Bahkali said the NSHR will have to pursue the matter through the courts if the father refuses to cooperate. He added that several philanthropists have offered to meet the woman's wedding expenses to persuade the father to consent to her getting married. The father has, however, rejected all such offers. Al-Bahkali said the NSHR considers the attitude of such parents to be akin to human trafficking. He added that Shariah courts have the authority to transfer a man's guardianship to another person or to the court itself if the man denies the daughter's legal right to get married. The NSHR's Jazan branch is currently dealing with 10 similar cases filed by women whose parents refuse them permission to marry. |
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Efforts on to curb underage marriages | |
2011-02-03 | |
![]() They said under the new regulations, marriage contracts will be made at specialized courts to ensure that prospective brides are not too young and will not be harmed by marriage. They will also decide whether the age of the would-be groom is suitable. The sources said the ministry is working on the new rules and regulations with the Ministries of Interior, Health and Social Affairs. The age of consent was a controversial issue during recent discussions held at the Shoura Council. While many members called for making it 18, others believed that 15 was enough. Underage marriages are not uncommon in Soddy Arabia. Meanwhile, ...back at the ranch... 67 percent of over 1,000 people surveyed by the National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) criticized underage marriages and called for the age of consent to be 18. They said though underage marriages were permissible under Islamic teachings, the possible harm to the wives might be totally against Islam. Supporters, however, do not agree, citing the marriage of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) to Sayidah Aisha when she was only 11 years old.
Many people believe that setting an age of consent is very important in the modern age to ensure happy married lives. Though the gap is still wide between opponents and supporters of underage marriages, the majority of Saudi citizens support fixing an age of consent under which girls could not be forced to marry. | |
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-Lurid Crime Tales- | |
Father burns boys genitals for bed-wetting | |
2011-01-21 | |
[Arab News] The National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) said on Wednesday it was investigating press reports that a father in Yanbu had burned his four-year-old son's genitals as punishment for bed-wetting. "This is violence against children about which we will not keep silent," the NSHR said in a statement.
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Possessed by jinn? 29-year-old in chains for six years |
2010-07-23 |
[Arab News] A 29-year-old Saudi in Makkah has been living in chains for over six years because he is, according to his father, possessed by a female jinn who refuses to leave him. "Medical doctors and religious sheikhs have failed to diagnose my son. When he has fits, he has convulsions and his entire body twists and his eyes become completely white. Then the voice of a woman can be heard coming from him," said the father of the young man identified only as Turki. "When my son first began suffering from this problem I took him to sheikhs to recite Qur'an on him but most of them became scared when they heard the female voice telling them that she was a royal jinn and that no one can exorcise her unless Turki dies," he said. The father said a sheikh advised him to tie his son's arms and legs with iron chains and to read Qur'an on him. "We did this. My son became quiet but is totally unaware of what is happening around him. He does not talk and is now unable to harm anyone," he added. The man divorced Turki's mother some time before he was possessed. His wife now lives with the couple's four children in a two-room apartment. "I also used to be possessed and this began when I was nine. I used to see a woman who would at times appear very beautiful and at times extremely ugly. I also used to see her sometimes surrounded by fire and sometimes with animal limbs," he said. The man said he suffered from this for over 40 years until a sheikh finally cured him. "My happiness was, however, short-lived because my son is now afflicted with a similar problem," he added. Muhammad Al-Suhali, professor of Shariah at Umm Al-Qura University in Makkah and a member of the National Society for Human Rights (NSHR), said he visited the young man and found him to be in a miserable condition. "Turki was in a semi coma. He did not know what was going around him. He could not eat, drink or use the toilet without the help of others," he said. Al-Suhali said when he started reading some Qur'anic verses, Turki became furious and started shaking until he was about to fall out of his bed. "When I stopped reciting, he became quiet again but was distant and unaware of what was happening," he said. He said the family is very poor. "The young man lives with his mother in the basement of an old building. They only have two small rooms, a bathroom and a kitchen. Their furniture is old and they live in very primitive conditions," he said. He called on the Ministry of Social Affairs to provide them with better accommodation and to include Turki in its social security program. "The whole family lives on SR850 a month that they receive in social security," he said. Al-Suhali commended the patience and determination of Turki's young wife, who remains with him in spite of his condition. |
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Makkah prisoner loses eyesight after flogging |
2010-07-10 |
A prisoner at a Makkah reformatory allegedly lost his eyesight after he was whipped before being medically examined, his younger brother told Arab News on Friday. "My eldest brother was suffering from diabetes and high blood pressure. He had suffered from a stroke and was whipped while sitting on his wheelchair. While being whipped, he became blind," Ali Muhammad alleged. Muhammad said his brother was sentenced about eight months ago on charges of fraud and ordered to serve a six-month prison sentence, in addition to 150 lashes, to be applied on three separate occasions. "Before he started his jail term, my brother was suffering from diabetes, hypertension and heart problems. He prepared an official medical report about his health condition and sent it to the Makkah Governorate in the hope the authorities would waive his punishment," Muhammad said. He said the governorate asked the prisons department to refer the prisoner to a hospital in Makkah to help decide if his sentence should be waived. "The prisons department did not send my brother to any hospital. While in prison he had a stroke which paralyzed him from the left side," he added. "When he was about to complete his jail term, he was whipped before being seen by the prison doctor. Before the whipping was completed, he cried that he could not see. He had lost his eyesight." Muhammad said his mother complained to the National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) in Makkah, asking it to investigate the incident. The society asked one of its members, Islamic Shariah professor Muhammad Al-Suhali, to look into the case. Al-Suhali said he met with the director of Makkah prisons, Col. Muhammad bin Shahlool, who promised to cooperate fully with the NSHR. "It was clear to me from the testimonies of other inmates that the prisoner was whipped while on his wheelchair and that the beating was focused on his neck, the only visible part of his body," Al-Suhali said. Al-Suhali quoted eyewitnesses as saying that they saw blood spots on the prisoner's forehead. "This is what actually caused his blindness," he said. He confirmed that before he was sent to the penitentiary, the prisoner was suffering from underlying health conditions. He also alleged a civilian who oversaw the flogging told him that the flogger, a prison employee, initially refused to whip the prisoner because of his health but was forced by the prison authority to do so. Al-Suhali said this civilian, the prison's medical doctor and a number of inmates all testified that they saw bloodstains on the prisoner's forehead and heard him crying that he could not see. He said the next day the prisoner complained he had not received any real care when he was sent to Al-Zahir hospital. He added the prisoner had told him that he had asked for an MRI, but the hospital said its equipment was in use and referred him to Hira hospital, which then refused to receive him. Al-Suhali said he sat with the prisoner. "He is paralyzed, blinded and neglected. He is also suffering from poverty as he cannot support his mother and underage brothers," he said. He added that the victim's debts had reached more than SR350,000 and that the landlord kicked his mother, a cancer patient, and his brothers out of their rented apartment. The NSHR member said he met with a committee composed of the prison doctor, the director of the prison's health center, the health supervisor and the supervisor of the prison ward and ascertained that the whipping had been carried out before the prisoner had been examined by a doctor. He alleged that the doctor had denied signing a report by the prison's management claiming the victim was medically examined before being whipped. He said the NSHR's branch office had filed a complete report about the investigations with the society's main office in Riyadh. The main office had sent follow-up reports of the case to the Makkah Governorate, the Prosecution and Investigation Commission (PIC) and the committee for the care of prisoners. He said the PIC had sent one of its staff members to meet with the prisoner before a decision was made to set up a Shariah committee to look into the case and decide whether he was entitled to be released. "Two weeks have passed but the committee has not been formed," he added. Al-Suhali said the poor condition of the prisoner was enough reason to sign off on his release. He said the society would approach philanthropists and welfare societies to pay the prisoner's debts and help him financially. He noted that the prisoner's health condition had worsened and that he had lost control of his bladder. |
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Saudi forces carrying out mop-up operations | |||
2009-11-17 | |||
The Saudi Air Force, Army, Navy and public security were Monday carrying out mop-up operations, according to military sources. Apache helicopters destroyed infiltrators' missile launch pads and their night hideouts. Military analysts said that infiltrators were hemmed in by Apache helicopter attacks and army sniper fire at the areas of the most intense fighting around Mt. Dokhan and Mt. Doud and the village of Al-Ghawiya, where infiltrators sought cover in houses from air and artillery strikes. The rebels suffered a further setback with the killing of their official spokesman.
The sources said that the Saudi Armed Forces have tightened control over sites at Umm Al-Daba Mountains after infiltrators tried to sneak in Sunday night, launching RPGs. The Saudi artillery destroyed their hideouts.
In Dammam, Emir of the Eastern Province Prince Muhammad Bin Fahd told a group of judges, senior officials and other dignitaries Monday that a decisive victory was near. He described the military operations as "heroic, honorable and dignified." The National Society for Human Rights, meanwhile, has said it is looking into eyewitness reports of infiltrators using human shields.
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