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Amnesty International highlighted the Saudi authorities’ release of Ali Al-Nimr, after “concluding a 10-year sentence a tragedy. The Saudi authorities arrested him when he was a child on charges of protesting.”
The organization stated that, “Throughout this time, the sword was tied to the neck of Ali al-Nimr after he was sentenced to death in a grossly unfair trial, before the death penalty for minors was abolished.”
It pointed out that “Ali Al-Nimr's friends, Daoud Al-Marhoon and Abdullah Al-Zaher, are still in prison, serving a very harsh 10-year sentence. We will not stop fighting for them!”
Ali al-Nimr, the nephew of prominent Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr whose 2016 execution led to protests in Saudi Arabia and Iran, was 17 when he was arrested in February 2012 for participating in protests in the kingdom's Eastern Province. His father, in a tweet, thanked everyone who stood by the family over the past decade.
The Saudi Human Rights Commission said in February that the death sentences imposed on Ali al-Nimr, Daowod al-Marhoon and Abdullah al-Zahir, who were 17 and 15 when they were arrested, had been commuted to 10 years in prison.
The Saudi Public Prosecutor had ordered a review of the death sentences issued against the three young men following a royal decree in 2019 to abolish the application of death sentences to perpetrators of minor crimes and instead place them in juvenile detention centers for a period of up to ten years.
In March, United Nations human rights experts called for the release of the three young men, citing allegations of torture and unfair trials. "Our thoughts are with Ali and his family, who have waited for this day, for so many years, for fear of his execution at any moment," said Maya Foa, director of the anti-death penalty charity Reprieve which has worked on the tiger's case for several years.
She added, "We are overwhelmed with the release of Ali, although he should never be imprisoned as long as his 'only crime' is attending protests to demand democratic rights."
Saudi human rights record has come under increasing scrutiny by the United Nations and the West since the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018 at the kingdom's consulate in Istanbul and the arrest of women's rights activists in 2019.
#Amnesty_International #Prisons #Saudi Arabia #Human Rights About 3 years
This page is the English version of Almasirah Media Network website and it focuses on delivering all leading News and developments in Yemen, the Middle East and the world. In the eara of misinformation imposed by the main stream media in the Middle East and abroad, Almasirah Media Network strives towards promoting knowledge, principle values and justice, among all societies and cultures in the world
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