Saudi Arabia freezes new trade with Canada for urging
activists' release
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[August 06, 2018]
By Aziz El Yaakoubi and David Ljunggren
RIYADH/OTTAWA (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia
froze new trade and investment with Canada after Ottawa urged Riyadh to
free arrested civil society activists, in the top oil exporter's latest
retort to Western criticism of its human rights record.
The Gulf Arab kingdom also recalled its ambassador and gave the Canadian
ambassador 24 hours to leave the country, a Saudi foreign ministry
statement said late on Sunday, adding it retained "its rights to take
further action."
The announcement carried on the official Saudi Press Agency caught
diplomats in Riyadh off guard, a source with knowledge of the situation
told Reuters, noting that both the Saudi and Canadian ambassadors were
away on leave when it was made.
"The entire diplomatic community was surprised by the move," the source
said.
It was not immediately clear what effect, if any, the move would have on
the two countries' annual trade of nearly $4 billion and on a $13
billion defense contract awarded in 2014.
The Saudi statement said its foreign ministry had been told the Canadian
foreign ministry and Canadian embassy had urged Saudi Arabia to
"immediately release" civil rights activists.
Canadian foreign ministry officials were not available for an immediate
comment.
Saudi neighbor and ally Bahrain said hours later that it stood with the
kingdom in the political row, without elaborating on whether it would
also sever business ties with Canada.
"The Kingdom of Bahrain affirms its full solidarity with the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia...against anyone attempting to undermine its sovereignty,"
the Bahraini foreign ministry said on Twitter.
Last Wednesday, Human Rights Watch said Saudi Arabia had arrested
women's rights activists Samar Badawi and Nassima al-Sadah, the latest
two to be swept up in a government crackdown on activists, clerics and
journalists. More than a dozen women's rights activists have been
targeted since May.
On Friday, Canada said it was "gravely concerned" about the arrests of
civil society and women's activists in Saudi Arabia, including Badawi,
the sister of jailed dissident blogger Raif Badawi.
CONTRACTS, CRITICISM
"We urge the Saudi authorities to immediately release them and all other
peaceful human rights activists," Global Affairs Canada said on its
Twitter feed. Raif Badawi's wife Ensaf Haidar lives in Canada and
recently became a Canadian citizen.
Most of those held campaigned for the right to drive and an end to
Riyadh's male guardianship system, which requires women to obtain the
consent of a male relative for major decisions.
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It is not the first time the kingdom has reacted strongly to criticism by
foreign governments.
In May, German magazine Der Spiegel reported that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman had ordered the suspension of new government contracts to German
companies, following months of strain between the two countries.
Riyadh had earlier recalled its ambassador to Germany for consultations and sent
a protest note over comments the German foreign minister made about a political
crisis in Lebanon.
It also recalled its ambassador to Stockholm and stopped issuing business visas
to Swedes in 2015 following official criticism of its human rights record,
prompting the end of the countries' long-standing defense cooperation agreement.
"Saudi Arabia is shooting itself in the foot. If you want to open up your
country to the world, you don't start expelling ambassadors and freezing trade
with countries such as Canada," said Joost Hiltermann, regional program director
for the International Crisis Group.
"Yet the leadership feels it faces an impossible choice: if opening up to the
world means having to accept change, they want to impose and carefully control
reforms, because they are deadly afraid of bottom-up change, for example via
women activists. But this gets them in trouble with their Western partners."
Saudi Arabia said it confirmed a commitment to refrain from intervening in the
internal matters of other countries including Canada, and in return rejected any
intervention in its domestic affairs and internal relations with its citizens.
"Any further step from the Canadian side in that direction will be considered as
acknowledgment of our right to interfere in the Canadian domestic affairs," the
Saudi statement said.
According to the website of the Canada Saudi Business Council, the annual volume
of trade between the two countries is about 14 billion Saudi riyals ($3.73
billion), consisting largely of Canadian investments in the kingdom and Saudi
exports of petrochemicals, plastics and other products.
In 2014, the Canadian unit of U.S. weapons maker General Dynamics Corp <GD.N>
won a contract worth up to $13 billion to build light-armored vehicles for Saudi
Arabia, in what Ottawa said at the time was the largest advanced manufacturing
export win in Canadian history.
(Reporting by Aziz El Yaakoubi in Riyadh; Nayera Abdullah in Cairo; Katie Paul
in Dubai; Denny Thomas in Toronto; and David Ljunggren in Ottawa, Writing by
Denny Thomas and Katie Paul, Editing by William Maclean)
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