'I was like a prisoner': Saudi sisters
trapped in Hong Kong recall beatings
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[February 23, 2019]
By Anne Marie Roantree
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Two sisters from
Saudi Arabia who fled the conservative kingdom and have been hiding out
in Hong Kong for nearly six months said they did so to escape beatings
at the hands of their brothers and father.
The pair, who say they have renounced their Muslim faith, arrived in the
Chinese territory from Sri Lanka in September. They say they were
prevented from boarding a connecting flight to Australia and were
intercepted at the airport by diplomats from Saudi Arabia.
Reuters could not independently verify their story.
Asked about the case, Hong Kong police said they had received a report
from "two expatriate women" in September and were investigating, but did
not elaborate.
The Saudi consulate in Hong Kong has not responded to repeated requests
from Reuters for comment.
The case is the second high-profile example this year of Saudi women
seeking to escape their country and spotlights the kingdom's strict
social rules, including a requirement that females seek permission from
a male "guardian" to travel.
The sisters, aged 18 and 20, managed to leave Hong Kong airport but
consular officials have since revoked their passports, leaving them
stranded in the city for nearly six months, their lawyer, Michael Vidler,
said.
Vidler, one of the leading activist lawyers in the territory, also
confirmed the authenticity of a Twitter account written by the two women
describing their plight.
On Saturday, dressed in jeans and wearing sneakers, the softly spoken
women described what they said was a repressive and unhappy life at
their home in the Saudi capital Riyadh. They said they had adopted the
aliases Reem and Rawan, because they fear using their real names could
lead to their being traced if granted asylum in a third country.
They posed for pictures but asked their features not be revealed.
Every decision had to be approved by the men in their house, from the
clothes they wore to the hairstyle they chose - even the times when they
woke and went to sleep, the sisters told Reuters.
"They were like my jailer, like my prison officer. I was like a
prisoner," said the younger sister, Rawan, referring to two brothers
aged 24 and 25 as well as her father.
"It was basically modern day slavery. You can't go out of the house
unless someone is with us. Sometimes we will stay for months without
even seeing the sun," the elder sister, Reem, said.
In January, a Saudi woman made global headlines by barricading herself
in a Bangkok airport hotel to avoid being sent home to her family. She
was later granted asylum in Canada.
"BROTHER BRAINWASHED"
Reem and Rawan said their 10-year-old brother was also encouraged to
beat them.
"They brainwashed him," Rawan said, referring to her older brothers.
Although he was only a child, she said she feared her younger brother
would become like her older siblings.
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Sisters from Saudi Arabia, who go by aliases Reem and Rawan, are
pictured at their lawyer Michael Vidler's office in Hong Kong, China
February 23, 2019. REUTERS/Aleksander Solum
The family includes two other sisters, aged five and 12. Reem said she
and her sister feel terrible about leaving them, although they "hope
their family will get a lesson from this and it might help to change
their lives for the better."
Reem and Rawan decided to escape while on a family holiday in Sri Lanka
in September. They had secretly saved around $5,000 since 2016, some of
it accumulated by scrimping on items they were given money to buy.
The timing of their escape was carefully planned to coincide with
Rawan's 18th birthday so she could apply for a visitor's visa to
Australia without her parents' approval.
But what was supposed to be a two-hour stopover in Hong Kong has turned
into nearly six months and the sisters are now living in fear that they
will be forcibly returned to Saudi Arabia.
They have said they have renounced Islam - a crime punishable by death
under the Saudi system of sharia, or Islamic law, although the
punishment has not been carried out in recent memory.
The pair say they have changed locations 13 times in Hong Kong, living
in hotels, shelters and with individuals who are helping, sometimes
staying just one night in a place before moving on to ensure their
safety.
Vidler said the Hong Kong Immigration Department told the women their
Saudi passports had been invalidated and they could only stay in the
city until February 28.
The department has said it does not comment on individual cases.
The sisters have applied for asylum in a third country which they
declined to name in a bid keep the information from Saudi authorities
and their family.
"We believe that we have the right to live like any other human being,"
said Reem, who said she studied English literature in Riyadh and dreams
of becoming a writer one day.
Asked what would happen on Feb 28, after which they can no longer
legally stay in Hong Kong, the sisters said they had no idea.
"I hope this doesn't last any longer," Rawan said.
(Reporting By Anne Marie Roantree; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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