Saudi court hands prison sentence to women's rights activist
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[December 28, 2020]
By Raya Jalabi and Marwa Rashad
DUBAI (Reuters) - A Saudi court on Monday
sentenced prominent women's rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul to five
years and eight months in prison, her family and local media said, in a
trial that has drawn international condemnation as Riyadh faces renewed
U.S. scrutiny.
Hathloul, 31, has been held since 2018 following her arrest along with
at least a dozen other women's rights activist.
The verdict poses an early challenge to Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman's relationship with U.S. President-elect Joe Biden, who has
criticised Riyadh's human rights record.
Hathloul was charged with seeking to change the Saudi political system
and harming national security, Sabq and al-Shark al-Awsat newspapers
said.
The court suspended two years and 10 months of her sentence - or most of
the time already served since her arrest on May 15, 2018 - with a
conditional release to follow, the newspapers and Hathloul's sister
said.
She could therefore be released around end of February 2021, with a
return to prison possible if she commits any crime, the newspapers.
Hathloul was also given a five-year travel ban, her sister Lina tweeted,
adding that both the public prosecutor and Hathloul could appeal the
judge's verdict.
United Nations human rights experts have called the charges "spurious",
and along with leading rights groups and lawmakers in the United States
and Europe have called for her release.
Rights groups and her family say Hathloul, who had championed women's
right to drive and for ending the kingdom's male guardian system, was
subjected to abuse, including electric shocks, waterboarding, flogging
and sexual assault. Saudi authorities have denied the charges.
The criminal court last week cleared the prosecution of torturing
Hathloul in detention, saying there was no evidence to support the
allegations.
Hathloul's sentencing came nearly three weeks after a Riyadh court
jailed U.S.-Saudi physician Walid al-Fitaihi for six years, despite U.S.
pressure to release him, in a case rights groups have called politically
motivated.
Foreign diplomats said the two trials aimed to send a message at home
and abroad that Saudi Arabia would not yield to pressure on human rights
issues.
Riyadh could also use the sentences as leverage in future negotiations
with the Biden administration, one diplomat said.
Biden has said he will take a firmer line with the kingdom, an oil titan
and a major buyer of American arms, than President Donald Trump, who was
a strong supporter of Prince Mohammed.
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Saudi women's rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul is seen in this
undated handout picture. Marieke Wijntjes/Handout via REUTERS
CHARGE SHEET
Hathloul rose to prominence in 2013 when she began publicly
campaigning for women's right to drive in Saudi Arabia.
Saudi officials have said the arrests of women activists were made
on suspicion of harming Saudi interests and offering support to
hostile elements abroad. Some of the women detainees have been
released while their trials continued.
Activist Nassimah al-Saadah was sentenced to five years in prison
with two suspended in late November, according to Human Rights Watch
(HRW).
Hathloul's family made her charge sheet public after her case was
transferred to Riyadh's Specialised Criminal Court, originally
established to try terrorism suspects but which has been used over
the past decade to prosecute perceived dissidents.
The main charges against Hathloul, which carried up to a 20-year
sentence, include: seeking to change the Saudi political system,
calling for an end to male guardianship, attempting to apply for a
U.N. job, attending digital privacy training, communicating with
international rights groups and other Saudi activists.
Hathloul was also charged with speaking to foreign diplomats and
with international media about women's rights in the kingdom,
including Reuters, which declined to comment.
"The case against Loujain, based solely on her human rights
activism, is a travesty of justice and reveals the depths to which
they will go to root out independent voices," said Adam Coogle of
Human Rights Watch. The Saudi government media office did not
immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
(Reporting by Raya Jalabi and Aziz El Yaakoubi in Dubai and Marwa
Rashad in London; writing by Raya Jalabi; Editing by Gareth Jones
and Angus MacSwan)
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