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Saudi Arabia must free detainees jailed for online expression before UN internet forum in Riyadh


By DAWN

September 13, 2024




41 organizations, including DAWN, in a joint letter, said Saudi Arabia must free all individuals arbitrarily detained solely for their online expression before hosting the United Nations Internet Governance Forum (IGF) in Riyadh from December 15 to 19, 2024.


The IGF adopted a thematic focus on advancing human rights and inclusion in the digital age, and Saudi Arabia continues to prosecute, lock up, forcibly disappear, and intimidate people into silence for expressing themselves on social media.


The groups said that, "The Saudi authorities must immediately and unconditionally release Osama Khalid, Ziad al-Sufyani, Manahel al-Otaibi, Abdulrahman al-Sadhan, Salma al-Shehab, Mohammad bin Nasser al-Ghamdi, and all others unjustly imprisoned for their online expression."They further called on all IGF participants — states, international organizations and individuals — to "demand the freedom of those unjustly detained for their online expression or else risk their presence at the IGF being instrumentalized to whitewash the violations of a government intent on silencing all critical voices online."


The full letter and the list of organizational signers follows below.




Joint Statement: Saudi Arabia must free detainees jailed for their

online expression ahead of Internet Governance Forum


Saudi Arabia must free all individuals arbitrarily detained solely for their online expression ahead of hosting the United Nations Internet Governance Forum (IGF) in Riyadh, which will take place from 15 to 19 December 2024. It is counter to the IGF's stated values for Saudi Arabia to host the IGF. In 2024 it adopted a thematic focus on advancing human rights and inclusion in the digital age and Saudi Arabia continues to prosecute, lock up, forcibly disappear and intimidate people into silence  for expressing themselves on social media.


In fewer than 100 days, Saudi authorities are set to lead critical conversations on shaping the future of Internet governance, all while they subject people in their country to unprecedented repression and decades-long prison sentences merely for expressing critical views online.


One of the most emblematic cases of this repression is that of Osama Khalid, a Saudi Arabian medical doctor and Wikipedia administrator who worked to make well-sourced knowledge freely available on Wikipedia. According to information available to our organizations, Khalid is currently serving a 32-year prison sentence on trumped up charges of "swaying public opinion" and " violating public morals". He was arrested in the summer of 2020 alongside another Wikipedia administrator in Saudi Arabia, Ziad al-Sufyani.


Similarly, on 9 January 2024, the Specialized Criminal Court (SCC), Saudi Arabia's notorious terrorism court, sentenced Manahel al-Otaibi, a 30-year-old fitness instructor and women's rights activist, to 11 years in prison for her promotion of women's rights online. Her conviction followed a secret trial marred by due process violations. The SCC found her guilty of "terrorist offences" due to her tweets in support of women's rights as well as photos she posted on Snapchat of herself at the mall without an abaya (a traditional loose-fitting long-sleeved robe). The verdict against her came just three months after Saudi Arabia was confirmed as host of the IGF.


Salma al-Shehab, a 35-year-old PhD student and mother of two small children, has been in prison since 2021 serving an absurdly long prison sentence for her social media posts supporting women's rights. On 25 January 2023, the SCC appeals chamber reduced her sentence from 34 years to 27 years in prison, followed by a 27-year travel ban on terrorism-related offences after a grossly unfair trial.


Abdulrahman al-Sadhan, a 41-year-old Red Crescent worker, was detained in March 2018 and is currently subject to enforced disappearance. In April 2020, the SCC sentenced him to 20 years in prison followed by a 20-year travel ban solely for his satirical tweets following a trial marred by violations, including a "confession" extracted under duress.


In July 2023, the SCC sentenced Mohammad bin Nasser al-Ghamdi, a 55-year-old retired schoolteacher, to death for criticising the Saudi authorities on X (formerly Twitter) and his online activity on Youtube. He had a total of only 10 followers on both of his anonymous X accounts. His death sentence marked an escalation in the Saudi authorities' use of the death penalty to crackdown on freedom of expression. 


These cases are emblematic of the Saudi authorities' chilling crackdown on freedom of expression, but they are not isolated examples. Dozens of people in Saudi Arabia, including visitors to the country, have been detained solely for their online expression. Consequently, many civil society organizations and advocates, who would ordinarily attend the IGF, have chosen not to travel to Saudi Arabia, fearing that they cannot safely and freely participate in the conference.


The Saudi authorities must immediately and unconditionally release Osama Khalid, Ziad al-Sufyani, Manahel al-Otaibi, Abdulrahman al-Sadhan, Salma al-Shehab, Mohammad bin Nasser al-Ghamdi, and all others unjustly imprisoned for their online expression. This is a crucial first step to demonstrate that they are serious about being drivers of Internet governance reform.


All IGF participants — states, international organizations and individuals — must also demand the freedom of those unjustly detained for their online expression or else risk their presence at the IGF being instrumentalized to whitewash the violations of a government intent on silencing all critical voices online.



Signatories:


  1. Access Now

  2. Amnesty International 

  3. ARTICLE19

  4. ALQST for Human Rights

  5. Center for Democracy and Human Rights in Saudi Arabia, CDHR

  6. Centre for Social Change (University of Johannesburg)

  7. DAWN

  8. Digital Action

  9. Electronic Frontier Foundation

  10. Equidem

  11. ESOHR

  12. FairSquare

  13. Femena

  14. Freedom Forward

  15. Freedom House

  16. Fundación Karisma 

  17. Global Forum for Media Development (GFMD)

  18. Global Network Initiative

  19. Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR)

  20. Human Rights Sentinel

  21. Human Rights Watch

  22. Internet Freedom Foundation

  23. Index on Censorship

  24. International Federation for Human Rights 

  25. International Service for Human Rights (ISHR)

  26. MENA Rights Group

  27. Middle East Democracy Center

  28. Muwatin Media Network 

  29. Myanmar Centre for Responsible Business

  30. No Peace Without Justice

  31. PEN America

  32. RootsAction Education Fund

  33. SMEX

  34. Tech Global Institute

  35. The Tor Project

  36. Rinascimento Green

  37. South Durban Community Environmental Alliance, Durban, South Africa 

  38. ReThinking Foreign Policy

  39. Urgent Action Fund for Feminist Activism

  40. Western New York Peace Center

  41. Women of Uganda Network (WOUGNET)




Source: dawnmena.org

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