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WSWS : News
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East
Amnesty International reports widespread human rights abuses
in Saudi Arabia
By Jean Shaoul
26 April 2000
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Amnesty International has called on the United Nations to break
the wall of silence surrounding human rights abuses
in Saudi Arabia. It is high time the UN put aside political
and economic considerations, and publicly scrutinised Saudi Arabia's
appalling human rights record, an Amnesty spokeswoman said.
Launching a campaign to raise awareness both internationally
and within Saudi Arabia about the human rights situation, Amnesty
said, Secrecy and fear permeate every aspect of the state
structure in Saudi Arabia. There are no political parties, no
elections, no independent legislature, no trades unions, no bar
association, no independent judiciary, and no independent human
rights organisations. Anyone living in Saudi Arabia who criticises
the system is harshly punished. After arrest, political and religious
opponents of the government are detained indefinitely without
trial or are imprisoned after grossly unfair trials. Torture is
endemic. Foreign workers are always at risk.
Amnesty called on Saudi Arabia to ratify international treaties,
to ensure fair trial, to prevent torture and ill treatment, and
to end discrimination against women, religious minorities and
migrant workers. It has launched a campaign among trade unionists
following the publication of its 1999 report, available at: www.amnesty.org/ailib/aireport/ar99/mde23.htm
Its report notes that scores of people were arrested as suspected
political or religious opponents, or on political or religious
grounds, including possible prisoners of conscience. While private
non-Muslim religious practices appear to be permitted, public
worship is not. Up to 30 Christian migrant workers were arrested
in Riyadh purely for their religious beliefs, after a copy of
the Bible was found outside a house. One Philippine national
was interrogated in hospital shortly after giving birth. She was
kept under house arrest until her husband returned from the Philippines
to be questioned about his religious activities.
Even Muslim religious practices must be vetted by government-appointed
Islamic scholars. Islamic practices that do not correspond to
the precepts of the dominant Wahhabi faction are banned and subject
to criminal prosecution.
Hundreds of political prisoners arrested in previous years
continue to be held without trial. Those still held include Shia
and Sunni Muslim critics or opponents of the government. The Shia
community is viewed with deep suspicion, particularly after the
1979 Iranian revolution. The Shiite community faces unequal access
to social service and government jobs and is rarely permitted
to build its own mosques or community centres. In November 1998,
several Mutawwa (religious police) attacked and killed
an elderly Shiite leader for repeating the call to prayer twicea
traditional Shia practice. Scores of prisoners detained in the
wake of the 1996 bombing of the US military complex of al-Khobar
continue to be held without trial and possibly without charge.
There are allegations of torture and ill treatment. Dr. Omran
Muhammed, a Kuwaiti national visiting Saudi for the Haj pilgrimage,
was detained, apparently for his political views, and held in
the General Intelligence headquarters and then in deportation
prisons. While in detention he was beaten, kicked and suspended
upside down with chains for hours at a time. He was denied contact
with his family or the Kuwaiti embassy. After a few months, he
was released without charged and deported to Kuwait.
Amnesty report that two prisoners have died in custody under
conditions that suggest torture was a contributory factor. One
had been held incommunicado for more than two years without trial
or charge. There was no known official investigation into his
death.
Most of the international attention has focused on the cruel
judicial punishments that continue to be imposed, although information
about both the court cases and the carrying out of such punishments
is limited. Two people had a hand amputated after being found
guilty of theft. Judicial punishments include floggings and executions.
Victims included two Filipinos who were found guilty of performing
illegal abortions and were sentenced to two years imprisonment
and 700 lashes each.
A Human Rights Watch report [www.hrw.org/wr2k/Mena-08.htm]
states that the number of executions rose to 84 before the end
of 1999, from 29 in 1998. Death sentences are typically imposed
for murder, rape, drug trafficking and armed robbery. The executions,
usually beheadings, were carried out in public after Friday prayers.
The majority of those publicly beheaded were foreigners, including
two women. Until the mid-1990s, women were usually executed by
firing squad in prisons and not in public. The stepping up of
punishment for women follows increasing concern over the position
of women in Saudi society.
Not only are punishments cruel, the legal procedures are positively
medieval. There is no independent judiciary, sentencing is arbitrary
and the justice system is manipulated by well-connected and politically
powerful people. There is no publicly disseminated penal code
or code of criminal procedures and the king has sweeping powers
to appoint and dismiss judges and create special courts.
Under regulations issued by the Minister of the Interior in
1983, detainees have no rights to judicial review, habeas corpus,
to legal counsel, to examine witnesses or even to call witnesses
to speak in their defence. Saudi laws permit convictions based
upon uncorroborated confessions. Crimes involving national security
are so broadly defined that they encompass all non-violent opposition
to the government.
The government owns all the domestic radio and TV stations
and closely monitors the privately owned but publicly subsidised
print media. It allows no criticism of Islam, the ruling family
or the government. The government appoints and sacks editors-in-chief
and dictates press content on sensitive issues. Foreign publications
are routinely censored or banned. Telephones are frequently tapped
and mail interfered with.
Local access to the Internet was made available for the general
public through cafes and universities in December 1998, but only
once filtering technology was in place to screen out material
deemed dangerous for security or public morals. This month, the
BBC reported that the authorities in Mecca had closed down a women-only
Internet cafe for reasons of public morality. What was uncovered
was against both our religion and our traditions, said Brigadier
Yousuf Matter of the civil police, but gave no details about what
offence had actually been committed.
Women face institutionalised discrimination affecting their
freedom of movement and association, their right to work and education.
They are not allowed to drive, need written permission from a
male relative to travel, cannot marry non-Muslims and their testimony
in court does not carry the same weight as a man's.
The main victims of this climate of fear and intimidation are
immigrant workers, who make up at least 35 percent of the 15 to
64 age group. Migrant workers are estimated to provide 84 percent
of doctors, 80 percent of nurses, 55 percent of pharmacists and
25 percent of all teachers. When oil prices tumbled in the mid
1980s, Pakistanis, Indians, South Koreans, Indonesians, Nigerians
and Filipinos replaced workers who until then had come from other
Arab countries. More recently, the government has begun to replace
expatriate workers with Saudis. Thousands of workers without proper
papers were arrested and deported.
While the US has no formal treaty with Saudi Arabia, it has
had extensive informal economic and security relations ever since
Aramco, a consortium of four US oil giants, gained the sole concession
to Saudi oil and began production after World War II. (See Anthony
Cave Brown, Oil, Gold and God, the Story of Aramco and the
Saudi Kings, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1999.)
US officials have made few public comments on Saudi's human
rights record, other than to note that women face discrimination.
Saudi Arabia gets no mention in the State Department's budget
presentation to Congress about programs to promote democratic
values, civil society and human rights.
The systematic use of torture and intimidation and the flagrant
abuse of basic democratic rights by the Saudi rulers are indispensable
for maintaining their privileges and wealth. Ruled by a royal
family of 7,000 princes, Saudi Arabia has none of the institutions
of bourgeois democratic rule. And because he [the king]
controls the country's income and his position as head of the
family comes first, describing Saudi Arabia as the world's largest
family business becomes axiomatic (Said Aburish, The
Rise, Corruption and Coming Fall of the House of Saud, Bloomsbury,
London, 1994).
A massive amount of the country's revenues goes straight into
the pockets of the ruling family. While official figures are unavailable,
opponents of the regime claim that 40 percent of national petroleum
revenues goes to the royal family. Prince Sultan's expenses are
rumoured to reach $20 million a month. Even if these claims are
inflated, there is no doubt that tens of millions of state funds
are spent on the palaces, mansions, jets and cars of the ruling
family.
Despite holding the world's largest petroleum reserves, and
producing one third of OPEC's oil, the country has run up deficits
for the last 17 years. Every time a barrel of oil drops by one
dollar it is said to cost Saudi Arabia about $2.5 billion in annual
revenue. Additionally, the mismanagement, corruption and open
looting of the oil revenues by the ruling family means that the
country is now in dire financial straits. Public debt is equal
to a massive 120 percent of Gross Domestic Product. With the population
growing by 3.5 percent a year, GDP per capita has fallen from
$16,650 when oil prices were high in the early 1980s to about
$8,000 in 1998. Many of its young people are unskilled and 15-20
percent of Saudis aged 20-29 are unemployed, as defence spending,
welfare programs and investment in energy modernisation have been
cut back.
Many Saudi firms are in poor financial shape: the Saudi Arabian
Fertiliser Company posted a $10 million loss, Al-Ahsa Development
Company's profits fell by a third. Cement companies have incurred
losses of more than 20 percent, while the Saudi Iron and Steel
Company was forced to reschedule $1.26 billion in loans to six
different banks. Much of the government debt is owed to Saudi
firms, and several of them have collapsed. The giant Bin Laden
construction company is owed $5 billion and has axed half of its
20,000 employees. Much of this debt is financed by local banks,
which are now feeling the pinch, prompting several mergers.
Even with the recent rise in oil prices, the government is
unable to sustain living standards, and resentment is growing
at the presence of US military forces. The royal family lives
in fear of strikes, uprisings in the Shia eastern region or even
the sabotage of its oil facilities as discontent mounts.
It was in attempt to forestall such unrest and maintain its
own privileges that the 75-year-old Crown Prince Abdullah, in
effect Saudi ruler since King Fahd's stroke some years ago, recently
announced a series of changes. Abdullah intends to promote foreign
investment, the privatisation of the telephone and electricity
industries, and tourism. The stock market, the largest in the
Arab world, will soon open to direct foreign investment in order
to lure foreign capital and prop up the ailing economy. The attempt
to seek entry into the World Trade Organisation means that the
ruling family must regulate the stock market, reform the tax code,
property and employment laws.
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