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Saudi Arabia Orders Temporary Release of Three Women’s Rights Activists

Saudi Arabia Orders Temporary Release of Three Women’s Rights Activists

(Bloomberg) -- A Saudi criminal court ordered on Thursday the temporary release of three women’s rights activists charged with undermining state security, in a case that has drawn international scrutiny and overshadowed measures to expand social freedoms in the kingdom.

The release was ordered after the Riyadh court reviewed a request from the defendants, the state-run Saudi Press Agency reported.

The press agency didn’t identify the defendants, but they are among at least 10 women who were detained last May along with male supporters and accused of undermining state security and the social fabric of the Islamic kingdom. Those standing trial include 29-year-old Loujain Al Hathloul, a prominent women’s rights activist, retired professor Aziza Alyousef, blogger Eman Al Nafjan, historian Hatoon al-Fassi and religious scholar Rokaya Almohareb.

“This is a long overdue step as these women should never have been jailed in the first place and their release should certainly not be on a ‘temporary’ basis,” Amnesty International said in a statement on Thursday. “They have been locked up, separated from their loved ones, subjected to torture and threats for simply peacefully calling for women’s rights and expressing their views.”

Amnesty identified the released women as Al Nafjan, Alyousef and Almohareb. Ali Shihabi -- who heads a pro-Saudi think tank in Washington -- posted on Twitter a picture of Alyousef with her family after being released.

Several had campaigned for years to end the ban on women driving in Saudi Arabia and spoke out against the guardianship system that requires permission from male relatives for women to travel abroad or marry. The driving ban was lifted a month after their arrests.

Their detention caused controversy at home and abroad, especially after some said they had been tortured in custody. Saudi Arabia says they were not mistreated but the case was among a number that have cast a pall over Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s push to loosen many of the traditional restrictions in the kingdom and prepare the economy for a time after oil.

In 2017, Saudi authorities rounded up hundreds of business people and members of the royal family in what the government said was a crackdown on corruption, but critics called a shake-down. The murder of government critic Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last October drew international condemnation. Authorities vehemently deny the prince played any role in Khashoggi’s killing.

The crown prince has said the women’s detention was unrelated to their activism. In an interview in October, he said authorities had evidence they had connections with foreign intelligence agencies and were leaking information.

People familiar with the indictment have said, however, that Al-Hathloul’s charges include communicating with diplomats and journalists but makes no mention of ties to foreign intelligence.

It’s not clear what charges the rest of the defendants face. Most observers believe Al- Hathloul’s case is the most serious. Western diplomats and journalists have been denied entry to the hearings.

--With assistance from Glen Carey.

To contact the reporter on this story: Dana Khraiche in Beirut at dkhraiche@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lin Noueihed at lnoueihed@bloomberg.net, John Harney

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.