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    Home »» Press Releases

    Saudi Arabia: Security Persecuting Shia Reformist
    Anti-Shia Discrimination and Aggression does not Spare Children

    Cairo 22 March 2009


    The Arabic Network for Human Rights Information stated that Saudi security forces should stop their police campaign against Shia citizens and immediately release those they have detained for participating in a demonstration in al-Taif province --especially six students, all of whom are under the age of sixteen. ANHRI further stated that Saudi security should stop persecuting Shia reformist Nimr Bakir al-Nimr for his criticism of policies of sectarian discrimination against the Shia in Saudi Arabia and for his call for reform and equality.

    Some Shia citizens have staged a sit-in in front of the headquarters of religious police commonly known as "The Promotion of Virtue and the Prohibition of Vices" after one of its members videotaped Shia women practicing religious rituals. Instead of punishing the officer for his irresponsible behavior, the Saudi police began a large-scale campaign of arrests. This campaign expanded after Sheikh Nemr criticized the Interior Minister for overlooking the rights of the Shia as Saudi citizens. The police began to track Sheikh Nemr with the purpose of detaining him, and attempting to take his children hostage.

    ANHRI stated that “the matter is becoming farcical: the Saudi King grants a royal amnesty to detainees for the justice of their cause, while the interior minister who belongs to the same dynasty issues sectarian statements along with a campaign of arrests targeting those calling for reform and equality as if their demands for justice were a crime that requires punishment.”

    ANHRI further added: “Why did the arrest campaign against Shia citizens of Saudi Arabia escalate only a few days after a delegation of 36 Saudi officials came back from Geneva last February after discussing the general report of the Human Rights Council?”

    The Arabic Network for Human Rights Information affirmed that demanding equal citizenship rights between Shia and Sunni is a legal and just undertaking and that those making such demands must be respected and not be liable to punishment.

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