Aramagedon
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Thanks for laugh.I think that protests and civil disobedience is an accepted measure of the satisfaction of people with their government/ruling system.
Compare Saudi Arabia with the Mullah "democracies" of Iran and Iraq on ALL levels, development, living conditions, education, etc. and you'll see who's good and who's evil.
I don't know how a Shiites get the audacity to tell us to free ourselves from an "oppressive" regime. Laughable indeed.
No wait, I get it, it's an oppressive "regime" to their shitty countries, and will continue to stomp them until they go back to their senses or vanish by their own actions.
Saudi Security Forces Arrest, Expel over 174,000 People in 1 Month
Posted by Veterans Today on April 27, 2015
The Saudi courts have also revoked citizenship of many Saudi nationals and naturalized citizens in the last one month mainly due to their dissent at the political and judicial system and social injustice.
The Saudi security forces have arrested, sent to exile or revoked citizenship of over 170,000 citizens in the last one month on different charges ranging from illegal migration to political dissent.
The Saudi monarch that is in the midst of an invasion of neighboring Yemen has widened detention of dissidents across the country, arresting thousands of people in the last mone month.
Shiites and even Sunni groups, other than Wahhabists, have been the main target of “unlimited detention” law in the last five weeks.
“Expulsion of workers on different charges takes place at a time when the Saudi officials are deeply worried about the presence of foreign workers, specially the Yemenis, in their country as they fear outbreak of civil protests,” the Arabic-language Emirati newspaper, Al-Ittihad, reported on Monday.
Saudi Arabia has nearly 10 million foreign workers from Pakistan, Yemen, the Philippines, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Egypt, Malaysia, Turkey and Indonesia.
The foreign workers are mistreated to such extent in Saudi Arabia that the human rights organizations have asked for investigating the same.
Videos have been released on the Internet showing the Ethiopian workers being beaten violently or even killed in public places and streets.
The human rights organizations have on different occasions objected to the unfavorable conditions of millions of foreign workers in Saudi Arabia, including low wages, mistreatment and sexual abuses calling it modern slavery.
Eye-witnesses said the policemen have been heard saying at the time of several arrests that the country’s “pure Arab race” and “pure Wahhabi Islam” needs to be preserved.
In late January, Saudi King Abdullah died and his brother Salman became king and two months later ordered the Saudi aggression against Yemen.
On Sunday, Talal bin Abdulaziz, brother of Saudi King Salman, warned of widening gaps in the Al Saud family, and underlined that his brother is incapable of ruling the Arab monarchy.
“Differences are emerging in the Saudi power circle and Prince Talal has warned of emerging gaps by saying that King Salman is incapable of administering the country,” a source close to Prince Talal told the Arabic-language Al-Manar TV.
The source said Prince Talal believes that “Saudi Defense Minister Prince Mohammad bin Salman and Prince Mohammad bin Nayef influence King Salman’s decisions the same way that (former Saudi king) Abdullah bin Abdulaziz obeyed whatever the then Saudi intelligence chief, Prince Bandar Bin Sultan, and Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal said”.
Other sources had also earlier this month disclosed that gaps had widened among the members of the Al Saud ruling family as a result of the war on Yemen.
“The differences have intensified in the Al Saud dynasty over the Saudi-led airstrikes on Yemen,” Senior member of Ansarullah movement Hossein al-Ezzi told FNA.
Al-Ezzi noted that several regions of Saudi Arabia have been the scene of insecurity and chaos since the start of the Saudi-led aggression against Yemen, and said, “These insecurities have been intensified” intimidating some Saudi rulers that the war on Yemen might lead to chaos at home.