Saudi jailed ex-deputy finance minister
Abdel-Hakim Al-Dakhil, son of former Saudi Deputy Minister
of Finance Abdulaziz Al-Dakhil, revealed that his father is currently being
detained at Al-Ha’ir Prison, south of Riyadh.
Al-Dakhil was detained last Ramadan, along with two others,
for paying tribute to reformist Abdullah Al-Hamid, who recently died in prison.
Al-Dakhil’s son announced in a widely-circulated video that
his father was detained at Al-Ha’ir Prison, and that the reason for his arrest
was a tweet calling for freedom and justice.
He called on the families of the detainees to reveal the
names of their imprisoned sons and daughters and the violations they are
subjected to, in support of the efforts of the Prisoners of Conscience to end
injustices and achieve dignity.
The Prisoners of Conscience, an organisation concerned with
the affairs of detainees in the Saudi Kingdom, confirmed on their Twitter
account the arrests of three writers and activists, namely: Aqel Al-Baheli,
Abdulaziz Al-Dakhil and lawyer Sultan Al-Ajmi.
The account referred to tributes written by the detainees on
social media platforms, grieving Al-Hamid, who is described as a “leader of
Saudi jurists and reformists”.
The three detainees extended their condolences to Al-Hamid’s
family, and talked about his qualities, while one of them indicated that he had
spoken to the late activist over the phone days before his death.
Al-Hamid died in his prison cell on 24 April, on the first
day of Ramadan, due to what Saudi human rights organisations described as
“deliberate medical neglect”.
The 70-year-old activist had suffered a stroke and went into
a coma, as the authorities refused to release him despite his age.
Al-Hamid was one of the most prominent advocates of reform
in the kingdom, and one of the founders of the HASEM project (Saudi Civil and
Political Rights Association).
He was arrested several times during his career, the last of
which was in March 2013, when he was sentenced to 11 years in prison.
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