http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/world/04-saudi-terror-fight-plagued-with-abuse-ai-qs-13


Saudi terror fight plagued with abuse: AI 

Wednesday, 22 Jul, 2009 | 03:52 PM PST |


 
In this June 21, 2005 file photo, Saudi security forces patrol the scene where 
they killed two suspected terrorists on the outskirts of Mecca, Saudi Arabia. - 
AP photo 

CAIRO: Saudi Arabia is holding more than 3,000 people in secret detention and 
has used torture to extract confessions in its anti-terrorism crackdown since 
the Sept 11, 2001 terror attacks, Amnesty International said in a report 
Wednesday.

The report criticised the international community for turning a blind eye to 
the kingdom's methods in its crackdown. Saudi Arabia has carried out a heavy 
wave of arrests against al-Qaeda members in past years after the militant group 
carried out a string of attacks against expatriate residential compounds, oil 
facilities and government buildings.

'These unjust anti-terrorism measures have made an already dire human rights 
situation worse,' said Malcolm Smart, head of Amnesty's Middle East and North 
Africa program, in a press release.

Asked about the report, a Saudi Interior Ministry official, Abdulrahman 
Alhadlaq, said, 'these are claims that have to be proven.'

'Our policies on human rights are very clear and the orders given are for 
prisoners to be treated with respect and according to international human 
rights principles,' Alhadlaq said. 'If anything happened, it would be an 
individual case and if it is brought to anybody's attention it will be dealt 
with.'

The report came two weeks after the Saudi government said it had convicted 330 
al-Qaeda militants in the kingdom's first known terrorism trials for suspected 
members of the terror network.

One militant was sentenced to death, and the others were given jail terms, 
fines and travel bans in trials that were held in the utmost secrecy. 
Authorities said the defendants were accused of belonging to the 'deviant 
group,' a euphemism for al-Qaeda, as well as a range of other terrorism-related 
charges.

Amnesty said more than 3,100 people are being held 'in virtual secrecy' and 
others have been killed in uncertain circumstances.

Amnesty criticised the Saudis for carrying out 'secret and summary trials' and 
for reportedly torturing detainees to extract confessions. 

They said torture methods include 'severe beatings with sticks, punching, and 
suspension from the ceiling, use of electric shocks and sleep deprivation.'

'The abuses take place behind a wall of secrecy,' said Smart. 'Most (detainees) 
are held incommunicado for years without trial, and are denied access to 
lawyers and the courts to challenge the legality of their detention.'

Amnesty said it sought Saudi comment on its report but did not receive 'any 
substantive response.'

The US and other countries strongly pushed Saudi Arabia to crack down on 
terrorism after it was discovered that 15 of the 19 hijackers in the Sept 11, 
2001 attacks in the United States came from the kingdom. 

Saudi Arabia is also the homeland of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, but Saudi 
authorities revoked his passport in the mid-1990s.

Amnesty criticised the international community for failing to apply the same 
pressure on Saudi Arabia to improve its human rights practices for fear of 
angering a key Mideast ally that is the largest exporter of oil in the world.

'Rather than hold the Saudi Arabian government accountable for its dire human 
rights record, all too often other governments have preferred to look the other 
way and not question what goes on in the secrecy of Saudi Arabia's 
interrogation centres and prisons,' said the report. - AP



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