Saudiâs Brave Women Pull Back the Curtain on Crown Prince MBS


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The fact that MBS lifted the driving ban and simultaneously put in prison those who had campaigned and suffered for such reforms makes clear his actual motive: to silence dissent and prevent these womenâs voices from being heard.
By Medea Benjamin and Ariel Gold –Â March 18, 2020
Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman (MBS), Saudi Arabiaâs 34-year-old de facto ruler, has been on a tear recently. He arrested members of his own royal family and initiated an oil price war with Russia that has sent the price of oilâand the worldâs stock marketsâplummeting. Behind the headlines, however, another critical event will take place in Saudi Arabia starting March 18: womenâs rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul, who was arrested almost two years ago for advocating the right to drive, is due in court. The diabolical MBS wants the world to believe he is the Arab worldâs liberal reformer and took credit for eventually granting women the right to drive, but he is also the one who had al-Hathloul and nine other women thrown in prison, charging them as foreign agents and spies. The imprisonment of these peaceful women activists exposes the brutal nature of MBSâs regime and the duplicity of the Western democracies that continue to support him.
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Loujain al-Hathloul gained notoriety in 2013 for campaigning against the driving ban when she posted videos of herself driving as an act of civil disobedience. She was first arrested in December 2014 when she attempted to drive from the United Arab Emirates to Saudi Arabia and spent 73 days in prison at that time. Al-Hathloul has also been an outspoken advocate for an end to the male guardianship system that treats women as no more than children throughout their entire lives.
On May 15, 2018, a group of armed men from the state security agency raided Loujainâs familyâs house and arrested her. For the first three months of her detention, she was held incommunicado with no access to her family or a lawyer. According to the communication she was later able to have with her family, during those three months, she was beaten, waterboarded, given electric shocks, sexually harassed, and threatened with rape and murder.
Loujain languished in a Saudi prison for almost a year before the public prosecutorâs office finally announced that it had concluded its investigation and alleged that Loujain was involved in activities that âaim to undermine the Kingdomâs security, stability, and national unity.â She was accused of contacting âenemy groupsââa reference to cooperation with the United Nations and human rights groups such as Amnesty International.
Loujainâs initial hearing was in March 2019, but she was not allowed access to a lawyer or to hear the charges prior to the hearing. Her family members were permitted to attend, but the court was closed to both diplomats and journalists.
According to her family, in August 2019, al-Hathloul was offered her freedom in exchange for denying, on video, that she was subjected to torture. She refused. For her incredible bravery and determination to fight for womenâs rights, eight members of U.S. Congress have nominated al-Hathloul for the Nobel Peace Prize.
The case of al-Hathloul and the other womenâs rights activists on trial in Saudi Arabia is a tremendous embarrassment for MBS, who has been putting an enormous effort into convincing his Western allies that he is a reformer and that Saudi Arabia is becoming more liberal. But behind the facade of new musical concerts and theme parks, the Crown Prince has overseen a vast crackdown on all forms of opposition and dissent. In November 2018, the CIA concluded that MBS was the one who ordered the gruesome assassination of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi. MBS is also responsible for dragging Saudi Arabia into an internal conflict in Yemen, where constant Saudi bombings have decimated what was already a poor country.
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The fact that MBS lifted the driving ban and simultaneously put in prison those who had campaigned and suffered for such reforms makes clear his actual motive: to silence dissent and prevent these womenâs voices from being heard. Loujainâs sister Lina al-Hathloul says that the regime arrested these womenâs rights activists âso that they make the [Saudi] people understand that change only comes top down. And the people should not even try to make the changes.â This sentiment was echoed by Suzanne Nossel, the head of PEN America. âThese gutsy women have challenged one of the worldâs most notoriously misogynist governments, inspiring the world with their demand to drive, to govern their own lives, and to liberate all Saudi women from a form of medieval bondage that has no place in the 21st century,â she said.
âThe very existence of this sham trial pulls the veil off of the authoritiesâ so-called push for reforms in the Kingdom,â said Lynn Maalouf, Amnesty Internationalâs Middle East research director. âHow can they initiate change in the country when the very women who fought for these reforms are still being punished for it?â
The bogus trial against Loujain al-Hathloul taking place this week should compel governments around the world to put more pressure on the Saudis and demand al-Hathloulâs immediate and unconditional release. Her imprisonmentâas well as MBSâs arrest of royal family members and Saudi Arabiaâs brutal war in Yemenâshould be particularly embarrassing to the world community in light of the G20 meeting scheduled to take place in Saudi Arabia in November. How can the worldâs leaders pretend that it is acceptable to meet in a country that imprisons and tortures peaceful women activists and bombs civilians in Yemen? It isnât.
Featured image: An image made from video released by Saudi activist Loujain al-Hathloul shows her driving toward the Saudi border with the United Arab Emirates before her arrest on Dec. 1, 2014, in Saudi Arabia., Loujain al-Hathloul/AP