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Saudi arrests 176 at demo for Islamist prisoners

Devil Soul

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Agence France-PresseMarch 2, 2013 04:46
Saudi arrests 176 at demo for Islamist prisoners
Saudi police have arrested 176 people, including 15 women, for holding an illegal protest to demand the release of Islamist prisoners, the official SPA news agency reported late Friday.

The agency, quoting a police spokesman, said protesters were arrested "after refusing to break up a gathering outside the offices of the investigation bureau and the prosecution in Buraida," in central Saudi Arabia.

The spokesman accused the protesters of acting on behalf of "deviant groups" -- a term the authorities usually use to refer to the Al-Qaeda jihadist network.

Demonstrations are banned in Saudi Arabia, an ultra-conservative Muslim kingdom that has remained relatively untouched by the Arab Spring uprisings.

Small groups of women have gathered almost daily in Buraida, north of Riyadh, to demand the release of imprisoned Islamist relatives, and dozens of protesters held a rare sit-in outside the Buraida prison in September.

At the time police dispersed the protesters and authorities later warned they would deal "firmly" with demonstrations, sparking condemnation from Amnesty International which urged Riyadh to withdraw its threat.

On Friday the London-based human rights watchdog criticised the latest arrests.

"This cat and mouse game authorities in Saudi Arabia are playing is, simply, outrageous," said Philip Luther, Amnesty's director for the Middle East and North Africa.

"Instead of persecuting peaceful protesters, what the Saudi authorities should do is listen to their demands and release all those held solely for exercising their human rights."

Amnesty said Friday's protesters were seeking the release of "more than 50 women and children" detained after a similar demonstration two days earlier.

The women and children "were demanding the release of their relatives, incarcerated without charge or trial or beyond the end of their sentences," said the watchdog.

Some of the women also called for the sacking of the interior minister of the country where "criticism of the state is not tolerated," it added.

A wave of deadly Al-Qaeda attacks in the kingdom between 2003 and 2006 prompted a Saudi crackdown that drove out the local branch of the group that was founded by the late Saudi-born Osama bin Laden.

An independent Saudi rights organisation says there are about 30,000 political prisoners in the Gulf kingdom, a charge Riyadh denies, saying there are none.

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Saudi arrests 176 at demo for Islamist prisoners
 
Just imagine - now the super Wahabis are referred to as "deviant groups" in Arabia -- If Wahabi is good why is super Wahabi bad? Democracy, that's just what will solve the broblem.

But seriously, what should we make of this? The super Wahabi Brotest and voices in the West talk of human rights - it seems that the Wahabi princes have decided that they will tolerate absolutely no dissent, even if peaceful (yeah right, super Wahabi and beaceful go together) -- what is to be done with this internal unrest ? Channel it outward
 
Just imagine - now the super Wahabis are referred to as "deviant groups" in Arabia -- If Wahabi is good why is super Wahabi bad? Democracy, that's just what will solve the broblem.

But seriously, what should we make of this? The super Wahabi Brotest and voices in the West talk of human rights - it seems that the Wahabi princes have decided that they will tolerate absolutely no dissent, even if peaceful (yeah right, super Wahabi and beaceful go together) -- what is to be done with this internal unrest ? Channel it outward

Muse.. in all respect..certifying someone as Wahabbi would be reciprocating the same ideology as it too continues to classify others by branding in sectarian divides such as "Shii" or the most common branding of every other person that disagrees with them as "Mushrik" or Bid'ah.. lets not propagate this takfirism..
I believe the solution to a dividing ideology is to promote greater harmony.
Moreover, I believe the usage of the Wahabbi term in this fashion is an insult to actual family of abd-alwahhab.. who was infact a very prominent and respected scholar.. and so singling out a family with that term due to your disagreement with his son's Ibn-abd-al wahhab's ideology is fairly insulting in the broader sense.

Better to find a less dividing term.
 
Just imagine - now the super Wahabis are referred to as "deviant groups" in Arabia -- If Wahabi is good why is super Wahabi bad? Democracy, that's just what will solve the broblem.

But seriously, what should we make of this? The super Wahabi Brotest and voices in the West talk of human rights - it seems that the Wahabi princes have decided that they will tolerate absolutely no dissent, even if peaceful (yeah right, super Wahabi and beaceful go together) -- what is to be done with this internal unrest ? Channel it outward

Terrorist and deviants at home are hero's overseas. The strict spanking in post 9/11 world has forced the house of saud radically rethink their ways. Pre-9/11 these "deviants" were simply exported overseas on oil money to spread the good message of islam - and in exchange give legitimacy to house of Saud. Afghanistan served as a long term dumping ground followed by Africa, Libya and now Syria!
 
Thread closed.Infractions will follow.

Reopened again, don't bring sectarian issues and flaming here again.
 
Terrorist and deviants at home are hero's overseas. The strict spanking in post 9/11 world has forced the house of saud radically rethink their ways. Pre-9/11 these "deviants" were simply exported overseas on oil money to spread the good message of islam - and in exchange give legitimacy to house of Saud. Afghanistan served as a long term dumping ground followed by Africa, Libya and now Syria!

So what you are saying is that this issue of people in jail and protests against the state is intimately connected with the religious ideology of the State, which is Wahabism - how can the tate argue that these people in jail are too Wahabi?
 
The probably arrested the demonstrators on orders from their masters.

What are these demonstrators protesting for?
Arabs only know how to live as slaves.
 

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