• Press Release

Saudi Arabia Threatens New NGO in an Attempt to Intimidate and Repress Human Rights Activism

May 1, 2013

Contact: Suzanne Trimel, [email protected], 212-633-4150, @AIUSAmedia

(NEW YORK) – Saudi Arabian authorities have interrogated and intimidated four founding members of an emerging human rights group, said Amnesty International, which demanded that the repression stop.

In recent days, the co-founders of the independent Union for Human Rights have been called in for questioning by Saudi Arabian authorities and threatened with further interrogation. They remain at risk of being detained at any time.

Abdullah Modhi al-Attawi, Mohammad Aeid al-Otaibi, Abdullah Faisal al-Harbi, and Mohammad Abdullah al-Otaibi have been charged with founding and publicizing an unlicensed organization as well as launching websites without authorization.

“None of the charges against these four men relates to an internationally recognizable crime, and the irony is that it was precisely because of their attempt to formally register the organization that the authorities clamped down on them,” said Philip Luther, Middle East and North Africa director at Amnesty International. “The Saudi Arabian authorities must stop this repression, remove any arbitrary barriers to the organization’s registration and allow the activists to continue with their legitimate human rights work.”

“While the Saudi Arabian authorities continue their human rights crackdown, U.S. officials have publicly said little or nothing,” said Sunjeev Bery, Middle East and North Africa Advocacy director for Amnesty International USA. “It isn’t enough for U.S. diplomats to merely issue an annual report on human rights. The ‘business-as-usual’ U.S.-Saudi relationship must change immediately.”

Saudi Arabia lacks clear laws about how to establish a non-governmental organization (NGO).

On April 1, the four men formally informed the Saudi Arabian authorities about the newly created Union for Human Rights and requested a license. They did not hear back until they were each contacted separately and ordered to report for questioning at the Bureau of Investigation and Public Prosecution on April 28-30.

The NGO’s founding statement lists among its aims: “to spread and defend the culture of human rights, enforce its principles and values, and promote the Universal Declaration of Human Rights”, and “to reinforce the role of women in political participation and social activities in accordance with Islamic Sharia [law]”.

It also intends “to abolish punitive death penalties” and “to achieve its objectives by all legally and morally legitimate means by resorting to the judiciary when deemed necessary and by activating the rule of law.”

All of the organization’s founding members have a history of activism.

Mohammad Abdullah al-Otaibi is a prominent activist who was previously arrested on January 1, 2009 for participating in demonstrations against the Israeli killing of Palestinians during its “Operation Cast Lead” offensive in Gaza in late 2008 and early 2009. He was subsequently convicted and sentenced to three years in prison.

The other three are long-standing human rights and environmental activists who have also been detained in the past for their activism. One of them was a security officer in a Saudi Arabian anti-terrorism unit who resigned in protest at what he considered the security forces’ inhumane practices.

Since March 2013, on behalf of the new Union for Human Rights, the four activists attended court sessions of other prominent activists and issued reports and public statements about ongoing human rights violations in Saudi Arabia.

Among the cases they had been monitoring and commenting on is the trial and detention of Dr. Abdulkareem Yousef al-Khoder and Mohammed Saleh al-Bajady, co-founders of another independent human rights NGO – the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Organization (ACPRA).

“The way the Union for Human Rights’ founders are being dealt with is particularly striking given the efforts they have made to engage constructively with the authorities and to refrain from what the government might consider provocative language,” said Luther. “Their treatment mirrors a long-standing pattern of disdain for and intolerance of independent organizations by the Saudi Arabian authorities. We urge them once again to cease this harassment, to release prisoners of conscience, including Dr. Abdulkareem Yousef al-Khoder and Mohammed Saleh al-Bajady, and to allow human rights defenders to carry on with their legitimate work untrammeled.”

Amnesty International is a Nobel Peace Prize-winning grassroots activist organization with more than 3 million supporters, activists, and volunteers in more than 150 countries campaigning for human rights worldwide. The organization investigates and exposes abuses, educates and mobilizes the public, and works to protect people wherever justice, freedom, truth, and dignity are denied.