Leading Saudi activist dies in detention, say campaigners
A leading activist
serving an 11-year prison sentence has died in detention in Saudi Arabia,
campaigners have said, highlighting the kingdom’s human rights record. Abdullah al-Hamid, 69,
died after a stroke in his prison cell earlier this month, according to
multiple rights groups, including Amnesty International.
“Dr Hamid was a
fearless champion for human rights in Saudi Arabia,” said Lynn Maalouf, Middle
East research director at Amnesty. “Our thoughts are with his family and
friends, who for the past eight years had been deprived of his presence as a
result of the state’s inhumane repression.” “He, and all other
prisoners of conscience in Saudi Arabia, should never have been in jail in the
first place,” Maalouf added. Hamid was a founding
member of the rights group the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association
(ACPRA) and was sentenced to to prison in March 2013, campaigners said.
He faced multiple
charges, including “breaking allegiance” to the Saudi ruler, “inciting
disorder” and seeking to disrupt state security, according to Amnesty. Other ACPRA members
have also been imprisoned in the past, including another co-founder, Mohammad
al-Qahtani, who was jailed for 10 years in 2013, Amnesty said. Saudi Arabia has long
faced international criticism over its human rights record. That criticism has
grown since Mohammed bin Salman was named crown prince and heir to the Saudi
throne in June 2017.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/24/leading-saudi-activist-dies-in-detention-say-campaigners-abdullah-al-hamid
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