Saudi Arabia: Women’s rights activist gets 34 years in prison for her tweet criticizing the country

In mainstream Islam women have no rights. They’re seen as inferiors; according to the Quran women must be fully covered to prevent themselves from being abused

“Reforming” Saudi Arabia is cruelly cracking down on its female dissidents more than ever. Saudi Arabia is one of the world’s foremost Sunni countries and a strict Sharia state. In mainstream Islam, women have no rights. They’re seen as inferiors; according to the Quran, women must be fully covered, to prevent themselves from being abused. (Quran 24:31, 33:59). The Saudi male guardianship program is in accordance with the Quran also:

“Men have authority over women because Allah has made the one superior to the other, and because they spend their wealth to maintain them. Good women are obedient. They guard their unseen parts because Allah has guarded them. As for those from whom you fear disobedience, admonish them and send them to beds apart and beat them.” — Qur’an 4:34

The Saudi practice of male guardianship for women continues to oppress and degrade women, contrary to the occasional optics. The treatment of Salma al-Shehab is an indicator of how Saudi Arabia intends to keep on oppressing women in the name of divine law in Islam, the Sharia.

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“Saudi activist sentenced to 34 years in prison for Twitter activity,” by Celine Alkhaldi, CNN, August 17, 2022:

(CNN)Saudi women’s rights campaigner Salma al-Shehab was sentenced to 34 years in prison on Monday for her activity on Twitter, according to court documents viewed by CNN.

Al-Shehab, 33, was also banned from traveling outside of Saudi Arabia for another 34 years.

The PhD student at Leeds University in the United Kingdom had been arrested in January 2021 and was subjected to questioning sessions over a period of 265 days before being brought to the Specialized Criminal Court, according to independent human rights organization ALQST.

She was initially given a six-year sentence late last year — this was increased to 34 years after al-Shehab filed an appeal, according to the documents.

The charges filed against her by the Public Prosecution included “providing succor to those seeking to disrupt public order and undermine the safety of the general public and stability of the state, and publishing false and tendentious rumors on Twitter,” ALQST said.

Al Shehab told the court that without prior warning, she was “propelled” into the months-long investigation, during which she was kept under solitary confinement, according to the court documents.

The mother of two also asked the court to take into consideration the need to care for her children and sick mother, the documents said.

ALQST’s Head of Monitoring and Communications Lina Al-Hathloul told CNN that al-Shehab had been arrested for supporting her sister Loujain al-Hathloul — a prominent activist who spent more than 1,000 days in jail following a May 2018 sweep that targeted well-known opponents of the kingdom’s since-rescinded law barring women from driving — and other prisoners of conscience on Twitter.

Lina Al-Hathloul said in the ALQST statement that al-Shehab’s sentence “makes a mockery of the Saudi authorities’ claims of reform for women and of the legal system,” adding that it “shows that they remain hellbent on harshly punishing anyone who expresses their opinions freely.”…

Source: Jihad Watch