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Saudi Arabia Releases 8 in Activist Crackdown


FILE - Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is pictured at a meeting at the Pentagon in Washington, March 22, 2018. Activists and diplomats have speculated that recent arrests in Saudi Arabia may be aimed at appeasing conservative elements opposed to social reforms pushed by the crown prince.
FILE - Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is pictured at a meeting at the Pentagon in Washington, March 22, 2018. Activists and diplomats have speculated that recent arrests in Saudi Arabia may be aimed at appeasing conservative elements opposed to social reforms pushed by the crown prince.

Saudi Arabia temporarily released eight people accused of communicating with organizations opposed to the kingdom and held nine others in detention, state news agency SPA reported Saturday.

The public prosecutor said it had interrogated people arrested last month, whom human rights groups and activists identified as women's rights activists.

In a statement, the public prosecutor said the detainees had admitted communicating and cooperating with individuals and organizations opposed to the kingdom, recruiting people to get secret information to hurt the country's interests, and offering material and emotional support to hostile elements abroad.

The statement did not identify the detainees, and Reuters was unable to immediately verify their identity.

17 arrested in all

A total of 17 people have been arrested, including five women and three men, the statement said. Nine people, five men and four women, remain in detention "after sufficient evidence was made available and for their confessions of charges attributed to them."

International rights watchdogs have reported the detention of at least 11 activists in the past few weeks, mostly women who previously campaigned for the right to drive and an end to the kingdom's male guardianship system, which requires women to obtain the consent of a male relative for major decisions.

The United Nations called on Saudi Arabia on Tuesday to provide information about the arrested activists and ensure their legal rights were guaranteed.

A ban on women driving in the kingdom, set to be lifted on June 24, has been hailed as proof of a progressive trend. But the recent arrests have soured that image.

The government announced two weeks ago that seven people had been arrested for suspicious contacts with foreign entities and offering financial support to "enemies overseas," and said other suspects were being sought. It did not name the detainees.

Last week, Saudi Arabia released four women's rights activists, fellow activists and Amnesty International said. The terms of the release were unclear.

Message to activists?

Activists and diplomats have speculated that the new wave of arrests may be aimed at appeasing conservative elements opposed to social reforms pushed by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. It may also be a message to activists not to push demands out of sync with the government's own agenda, they said.

State-backed media had labeled those held as "agents of embassies," unnerving diplomats in Saudi Arabia, a key ally of the United States.

The crown prince has courted Western allies in a bid to open up the deeply conservative Muslim kingdom and diversify its oil-dependent economy, the region's largest.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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