كتب الكاتب الفاتح جبرا المتوفرة بمعرض الدوحة
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Re: إطلاق سراح الناشطة السعودية لجين الهذلول (Re: Elhadi)
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BREAKING: Saudi women's rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul has been released, says her sister.
She was held for 1,000+ days after campaigning for the right to drive, and charged for terror-related offenses. Rights groups say she was tortured and abused in custody.
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Re: إطلاق سراح الناشطة السعودية لجين الهذلول (Re: Elhadi)
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Quote: BEIRUT — One of Saudi Arabia's most prominent women's rights advocates, Loujain al-Hathloul, was released from prison on Wednesday, one of her sisters said. Hathloul had been in custody since May 2018, when she was arrested as part of a government crackdown targeting feminist activists.
Her imprisonment, along with her allegations that she was tortured while in custody, focused global attention on the punishing, years-long crackdown by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on human rights activists, civil society figures and dissidents. Her release — which sister Lina al-Hathloul announced in a joyous Twitter message — was one of the clearest signs yet that Saudi Arabia was taking steps to blunt criticism of its human rights record by Biden administration officials.
“Loujain is at home!!!!!!,” the sister wrote.
President Biden had said during the 2020 election campaign that he would “reassess” the U.S. relationship with Saudi Arabia and ensure that “America does not check its values at the door,” marking a break with the Trump administration, which had largely refrained from criticizing the kingdom’s human rights record.
Former president Donald Trump had enjoyed a close relationship with the crown prince and said that alleged abuses by the kingdom — including the killing by Saudi agents of journalist Jamal Khashoggi — should not intrude on bilateral commercial and diplomatic ties.
Saudi women on the front line of change
Loujain al-Hathloul was prominent among a group of Saudi feminists who campaigned for women’s right to drive and the abolition of Saudi Arabia’s restrictive guardianship laws. The Saudi government lifted a ban on women driving in June 2018 — weeks after it had arrested Hathloul and the other activists, in what was widely seen as a message that any reforms in Saudi Arabia would be handed down by the leadership, not prompted by political activism. |
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