Global Roundup: Saudi Activist Jailed for Feminist Tweets Freed, Iranian Journalists Released, Trans Rights in the U.S., Sri Lanka Feminist Politics, New Play Looks at a Black Woman's Search for Love
Al-Shehab, 36, is understood to have left the prison in Saudi Arabia where she was being held and has been reunited with her two young children.
It is fantastic news. She has not seen her children during her whole four years of imprisonment. -Lina al-Hathloul, head of monitoring and advocacy at the Europe-based Saudi rights group ALQST
Al-Shehab was arrested while on holiday in Saudi Arabia in January 2021. Campaigners say she was kept in solitary confinement for more than nine months before she was brought before Saudi Arabia’s specialised criminal court.
She was initially sentenced to serve three years in prison for the “crime” of using a website to “cause public unrest and destabilise civil and national security”.
An appeals court later handed down the new sentence – 34 years in prison followed by a 34-year travel ban – after a public prosecutor asked the court to consider other alleged crimes.
The additional charges included the allegation that al-Shehab was “assisting those who seek to cause public unrest and destabilise civil and national security by following their Twitter accounts” and by retweeting their tweets.
Amnesty International said her “crime” was no more than “posting tweets in support of women’s rights”.
Last March an open letter was signed by more than 300 academics, students and employees at Leeds University calling for al-Shehab’s immediate release. It said she had been jailed “on the basis of peaceful tweets”.
It has been difficult for her. Not seeing her kids, not knowing whether she could complete her PhD. She was originally sentenced to six years, then it was increased to 34 years and then it was reduced to 27 years and then 4 years. It has been a nightmare really not to even be able to trust the judiciary and its decisions…She is very strong. Salma is a very brave woman. She went on hunger strike to complain about the conditions. -Lina al-Hathloul
The battle now was to get al-Shehab’s travel ban lifted so she could return to Leeds where she is a dental student, al-Hathhoul said.
She is symbolic of a pattern. She was released because of this pressure but many more others still remain in prison for the same charges. -Lina al-Hathloul
Al-Hathloul said at some point while al-Shaheb was in prison, her husband divorced her.
We don’t know all the circumstances around this but it seems like it’s a pattern … women having divorces filed against them and not being informed of it. It means she is being released under very sad circumstances but it is better than being in prison for 34 years. -Lina al-Hathloul
Al-Shehab is a member of Saudi Arabia’s Shia Muslim minority, which has long complained of systemic discrimination in the Sunni-ruled kingdom.
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