UK rights group urges Riyadh to release Palestinian, Jordanian prisoners
The UK-based Arab Organisation for Human Rights [AOHR UK] condemned a crackdown on living in the kingdom, confirming they were all detained without charge and have since been denied rights for family visits or contact.
More than one year later, the Saudi Public Prosecutor in Riyadh has claimed they had joined, supported and financed a ".
Most of the detainees were allegedly subjected to "forced disappearance, humiliation, torture and other forms of inhuman treatment" over the course of their imprisonment, according to the organisation.
None of them were represented by lawyers during the first court session, it added.
Their next trial session will take place on Sunday.
The statement called on global solidarity with their plight to help secure their swift release.
"AOHR UK confirmed that the trials against Jordanian and Palestinian detainees are of a political nature and are not legally based, while the authorities are attempting to give it a criminal nature to distort their image and justify the violations they were subjected to," the statement said.
"All the detainees are legally residing in Saudi Arabia with valid residency permit and have not committed any violation of Saudi law," it added.
An unnamed official cited in a Middle East Eye report in February said those arrested were overwhelmingly Hamas members, and had resided in for decades.
He also reported new arrests in February that targeted "everyone" with suspected links to the group.
The fear of being targeted in the kingdom has created a "situation of extreme incitement against Palestinians", a Palestinian resident of Jeddah, who spoke to MEE on a condition of anonymity, said.
The changing atmosphere in the country has led a number of Palestinians to leave the country, terrified of an imminent crackdown, the source added.
have tried to maintain a balanced relationship with despite the friction between their policies on a host of regional and international issues.
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The crackdown of February this year coincided with the trial of Mohammed Saleh al-Khodari, a senior member, who was arrested in April last year along with his son, in a move the Palestinian group called "strange and reprehensible".
Al-Khodari's three decades long residence in Jeddah and close relationship to Saudi authorities, were insufficient grounds to spare the "ambassador of Hamas" reprieve, who has been held in solitary confinement in Dhahban prison for months.
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