'US covers Saudi Arabia's worst human rights violations'
The US and Western allies of Saudi Arabia aid the country to suppress and kill dissidents at home and abroad which benefit from the economic revenue of the relationship
The year, 2019, marked the worst in recent history for human rights situation in Saudi Arabia, according to a watchdog that pointed out the key reason as the continued support of the country's western allies to cover its tyranny.
The Berlin-based European Saudi Organisation for Human Rights (ESOHR) released its 2019 report on Tuesday, detailing what it called "a downward trend" for human rights "that shows no signs of stopping."
The US and Western allies of Saudi Arabia aid the country to suppress and kill dissidents at home and abroad, the ESOHR report claimed citing only one actor controls the entire landscape with "his authoritarian instincts" when others are subdued.
"It has become clear that Saudi Arabia is being given cover by its political allies in both the US and several European countries, which benefit from the economic revenue" of the relationship, the ESOHR report stated.
Successive US governments had received billions of dollars from selling American weapons to Saudi Arabia, some of which have been used to commit war crimes in Yemen.
Saudi Arabia is able to "emboldened in its viciousness by this cover… while some of these countries even participate in and drive such abuses, as for example in US support for the war in Yemen," the report said.
The US President Donald Trump has celebrated this relationship, even displaying a poster detailing Saudi arms sales when hosting Crown Prince Salman at the White House.
"Saudi Arabia has seen a destruction, crushing and extirpation" of its political sphere, an independent judiciary, civil society and free press in recent years, the report alleged. Power has been accumulated around 84-year-old King Salman, and particularly his son and heir Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
Abroad, the Saudi government has continued its war against Houthi rebels in Yemen, support for jihadist rebel factions fighting in Syria, and the campaign against dissidents that claimed the life of Washington Post columnist and US resident Jamal Khashoggi.
Beside American weapons, Saudi forces have also used US intelligence and refuelling aircraft in their war against Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen. The civil war there began in 2015, with the Saudi government and it's United Arab Emirates allies throwing their weight behind deposed President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi in 2017.
US refuelling aircraft stopped supporting Saudi airstrikes in 2018 at Riyadh's request following Khashoggi's murder. Germany placed a temporary halt on Saudi arms exports after the killing, but other nations like France, Sweden, the UK and Spain refused to do so.
Khashoggi's murder threw a spanner in the works of Crown Princes' international charm offensive. He had worked hard to cultivate the image of a modern, liberal crown prince ready to pull his country into the future, but the assassination showcased ruthless and reckless authoritarianism.
The CIA concluded that Crown Princes likely ordered the killing, though the Saudi government and the crown prince have instead blamed rogue agents. At the end of 2019, a Saudi court sentenced five people to death and three more to 24 years in jail over the murder.
According to deputy public prosecutor and spokesperson Shalaan bin Rajih Shalaan, the court concluded that "the killing was not premeditated…the decision was taken at the spur of the moment." The Saudi government has yet to release information on the identities of those convicted.
Three senior defendants, including top the Crown Princes aide Saud al-Qahtani, were acquitted of all charges. The CIA intercepted communications between the head of the Khashoggi kill team—named as Maher Abdulaziz Mutreb—and Qahtani, in which Mutreb said to "tell your boss" that the mission had been accomplished.
The CIA took the "boss" to mean the Crown Princes, a conclusion backed up by at least 11 contacts between the Crown prince and Qahtani in the hours before and after Khashoggi's murder.
ESOHR said the Saudi court case was a "farcical scene" that acquitted "senior officials responsible for the killing." The move demonstrated the government's "intention to show further disdain for human rights," the watchdog argued.
On the domestic front, Crown Princes has assumed a portfolio of powerful government roles. The 34-year-old is seen as the power behind Salman's throne and is the face of the ambitious Vision 2030 project, which seeks to diversify the kingdom's mineral-dependent economy and introduce liberal reforms with a view to greater foreign investment.
But Crown Princes has also overseen a crackdown on dissent, whether by women's rights advocates, minority Shi'ite protesters or others. "It has become clear that the Saudi government has a strong desire to eliminate all domestic forces and voices that advocate for human rights, and it has become customary to criminalize every voice making a demand or a criticism," ESOHR said.
Among the most prominent figures detained is feminist activist Loujain al-Hathloul, known for her opposition to the female driving ban eventually lifted by Crown Princes in June 2018. She was kidnapped from the UAE in 2018 and returned to Saudi Arabia, held for several days and then released.
She was re-arrested in May 2018, one of several female and male women's rights activists. She has since been put on trial for undermining state security, though the details of the charges have not been revealed and reporters and diplomats have not been allowed to attend any hearings of her case.
Hathloul has said she has been repeatedly tortured in prison and threatened with rape and death, including in-person by Qahtani.
The kingdom's opaque justice system is central to the ESOHR's report. The Saudi judiciary is not independent and effectively acts as an arm of the ruling royal family. Sensitive cases are often routed through the secretive Specialized Criminal Court, established to try those suspected of terrorist offences.
The ESOHR noted that the rate of executions in Saudi Arabia has increased in the past few years, despite Crown Princes' suggestion that he would try and reduce the use of capital punishment.
The report also called attention to a concerning increase in the use of torture, especially on those who are eventually executed. This "ugliness and brutality," the ESOHR said, has become an "institutional practice ordered by the king and the crown prince, who provide protection for it."
The year ended with no sign of refinement, instead, further disdain for human rights was revealed as a thwarting scene in a ruling acquitted senior officials responsible for the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi Embassy in Istanbul.