Case SAU 020508.1
Follow-up of case SAU 020508
Arbitrary detention/ Corporal punishment/ Ill-treatments
The International Secretariat of the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT) has received new information about the following situation in Saudi Arabia.
The International Secretariat of OMCT has been informed by a reliable source and Antenna International, a member of OMCT SOS-Torture network, that, on 4 May 2008, the Mekkah Province Governor, His Royal Highness Prince Khalid Al-Faisal, authorized to carry out the sentence of flogging against Dr. Mohammed Ali Abu Razizah, a 60 year-old psychologist and lecturer at the Um Al Qura University in the city of Mekkah. The order was reportedly sent to the police in Mekkah to carry out the flogging.
The International Secretariat of OMCT is very much concerned for the physical and psychological integrity of Dr. Abu Razizah, as he is at imminent risk of flogging. OMCT wishes to recall that it unreservedly condemns the use of such punishments which clearly violates international human rights standards as embodied in the Convention against Torture and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
According to the information received, in early February 2008, Dr. Mohammed Ali Abu Razizah was arrested in Mekkah by agents of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (CPVPV), on the ground of being in an illegal solitude with a woman. Subsequent to his arrest, Dr. Abu Razizah was subjected to various ill-treatments and was beaten by members of the CPVPV for three hours before being handed over to the police.
The CPVPV is an authorised law enforcement religious police in Saudi Arabia, which is empowered to arrest, detain, and interrogate persons for undefined criminal offences. The law that defines the CPVPV’s tasks is very vague as it includes “guiding and advising people to observe the religious duties prescribed by Islamic Sharia, to preclude committing acts proscribed and prohibited by Sharia”. The law does not contain classification of which acts of commission or omission are criminal, meriting arrest and investigation, and which behaviour falls into the guiding and advising duties of the agency.
On 2 March 2008, Dr. Mohammed Ali Abu Razizah was sentenced by the First Court in Mekkah province to eight months of imprisonment and to be flogged 150 times on three instalments. During his trial, the judge swiftly charged and sentenced him and only relied on the CPVPV reports and evidence. In addition, Dr. Abu Razizah was not given the opportunity to bring his witnesses before the judge and challenge the evidences presented against him, and the lady who was involved in his case by the CPVPV was not called by the court.
It is to be feared that Dr. Abu Razizah was arrested and sentenced because of his ongoing criticism of the behaviour and tasks of the CPVPV personals. The CPVPV would then allegedly have insulted him and damaged his reputation, before tricking him into meeting a woman.
Moreover, since his arrest, Dr. Abu Razizah has been denied access to his on-going medications, as he suffers from Diabetics. He has also been denied access to his relatives and his lawyer, and was forced to sign papers without being allowed to read or understand them. He was also denied drinking water and from using the toilet by the prison guards.
On 31 March 2008, the Court of Cassation upheld the verdict against Dr. Abu Razizah.
On 1 May 2008, Dr. Abu Razizah’s case file was sent to the office of the Mekkah Province Governor for obtaining a permission in order to carry out the sentence of flogging against Dr. Abu Razizah. Indeed, according to the Saudi law, this procedure is needed in order to carry out this sentence. Once the permission has been obtained, the flogging punishment will be carrying out.
Please write to the authorities in Saudi Arabia urging them to:
Please also write to the embassies of Saudi Arabia in your respective country.
Geneva, 26 May 2008
Kindly inform us of any action undertaken quoting the code of this appeal in your reply.
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