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Monday 13 February RNW - News and analysis from the Netherlands in 10 languages, worldwide 24/7 on radio, television and online
King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia
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Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Saudis arrest rights activist, over 50 others

Published on : 8 March 2010 - 9:27am | By International Justice Desk (flickr/cc)
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A Saudi human rights group said on Sunday that security officials had arrested the son of one of its founders and more than 50 other people in the northern province of Qassim.

"Thamer Abdulkareem Al-Khather was arrested Wednesday evening for unknown reasons," the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association (ACPRA) said in a statement.
 

Thamer, whose father Abdulkareem Al-Khather is one of the founders of ACPRA, Thamer, is a university student and member of "the youth movement that calls for a constitutional reform" in the absolute monarchy, the statement said.
 

It described him as "interested in human rights" and "an advocate of prisoners’ rights."

He was arrested by the interior ministry's General Investigation Directorate (DGI), they said.
 

"Al-Khather and his son, Thamer, have been constantly harassed by the DGI's clandestine detectives a week before Thamer's arrest."
 

The same statement reported a campaign of arrests carried out in Buraidah, Qassim’s provincial capital, which targeted over 50 people, mainly youths and adolescents.
 

"We don't know why they were arrested, they arrested entire families and they still have some of the fathers, Mohammed Fahd al-Qahtani, a founder of ACPRA, told AFP.


Democratic reform

ACPRA was formed by 11 activists in 2009 to pursue democratic and legal reforms and promote human rights in the absolute monarchy.
 

Saudi Arabia has two officially sanctioned human rights organisations, both created in 2004. One is fully controlled by the government while the other operates more independently.
 

The independent groups ACPRA and the Human Rights First Society operate without permission.
 

Source: AFP
 

 

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From the former Yugoslavia to Rwanda, Cambodia and Lebanon, Radio Netherlands Worldwide reports on international justice. We offer background news and reporting on war crimes, human rights abuses and genocide.

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