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Saudi Arabia Sentences Woman To 34 Years In Prison For Tweeting (theverge.com) 258

A Saudi woman has been sentenced to 34 years in prison for retweeting activists through her Twitter account and sharing posts that spoke in favor of the right of women to drive. The Verge reports: Salma al-Shehab was a PhD candidate at the University of Leeds in the UK and was detained in January 2021 after returning to Saudi Arabia for a vacation. Shehab was initially sentenced to six years for using social media to "disturb public order and destabilize the security and stability of the state," based on having reshared tweets from Saudi activists living in exile who called for the release of political prisoners in the kingdom. The incident was reported in an editorial board piece from The Washington Post, which called it "yet another glimpse at the brutal underside of the Saudi dictatorship under its crown prince and de facto head of state, Mohammed bin Salman."

The Post reports that prosecutors in the appeal to Shehab's case argued for a more severe punishment under Saudi cybercrime and anti-terrorism laws, leading to a drastically increased sentence of 34 years, handed down on August 8th. The Freedom Initiative nonprofit, which advocates for the rights of prisoners detained in the Middle East, states that this is the longest known sentence for a women's rights activist in Saudi Arabia.

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Saudi Arabia Sentences Woman To 34 Years In Prison For Tweeting

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  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @08:53PM (#62798927)
    Going back to SA after shooting her mouth off like that on the internet? Did she forget the nature of her home country while living in the UK? The last guy who did that wound up in pieces, and he didnt even try to go back home - they actively hunted him down. If you leave a place like that and start speaking your mind, you make the new country your home and NEVER set foot in your birth country again. Ever.
    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @08:58PM (#62798937) Homepage Journal

      Well, dictatorships are notoriously inconsistent about cracking down on things -- like the senior Taliban leaders who send their daughters to elite overseas schools for education. Shooting your mouth off may be perfectly safe for you until somebody you're associated with falls out of favor.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Joce640k ( 829181 )

        Well, dictatorships are notoriously inconsistent about cracking down on things

        eg. Abortion.

        Abortion was illegal, then it was legal, now it's illegal again. Women are being persecuted just because they traveled while pregnant. Women scared to tell their doctors when they last had their period or if there's a possibility they might be pregnant.

        • It doesn't seem like abortion was de-facto illegal before Roe in any particular place. Think along the lines of cannabis being illegal across the entire US, but de-facto legal in certain states, which comes in the form of the federal government having no means of enforcing it in those states. Abortion bans don't seem to have been consistently enforced even where they were in effect prior to Roe.

          Anyways I don't think Roe being overturned will last. While I don't think it will return in the form of another SC

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by phantomfive ( 622387 )

            Anyways I don't think Roe being overturned will last. While I don't think it will return in the form of another SCOTUS ruling (who knows)

            Most people tend to be in favor of allowing abortions towards the beginning of the pregnancy, and oppose them towards the end of the pregnancy (with exceptions). There are extremists on both ends, but the only really tough question is where to draw the line.

          • Over the next 20 years or so we're likely to see referendums (referenda?) reinstating it

            That won't help the people being persecuted today.

            • Over the next 20 years or so we're likely to see referendums (referenda?) reinstating it

              That won't help the people being persecuted today.

              I think a woman should be allowed to have an abortion for any reason, like if it's Tuesday, or raining. Or is you wanted a girl, and the fetus is a male. Don't care philosophically.

              That being said, we aren't living in the 1920's any more. There are many safe and legal forms of birth control. If your fear of becoming pregnant is high, you can engage in sex with a high likelihood of not getting pregnant, from birth control pills, to condoms, to condoms with spermicide to non-penetrative sex to no sex at all

          • It doesn't seem like abortion was de-facto illegal before Roe in any particular place.

            I remember back in the day, a lot of women had "feminine problems" that required a trip to the hospital to get a "dilation and curettage".

            Darned if the D and C's didn't just about disappear after abortion was legalized.

            I was just a kid at the time, but I looked up what a D and C was, and darned if it didn't function exactly as an abortion.

            As for the Supreme's decision on Rode v. Wade I hope that they understand that they gave the Democrats an impetus to vote, and took away a tool the Republicans have

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by lsllll ( 830002 )
          Abortion is not illegal (at the federal level, at least). SCOTUS just said that it's not a constitutional matter and that it should be decided at a state level.
          • Abortion is not illegal (at the federal level, at least). SCOTUS just said that it's not a constitutional matter and that it should be decided at a state level.

            Which is dumb. If that's the logic, why have any federal laws at all? Murder isn't mentioned in the constitution, but murder is still a federal crime.

      • I don't care if the odds of getting bit by the snake are under 30% - I'm still not putting my hand in the cage.

      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        Well, dictatorships are notoriously inconsistent about cracking down on things -- like the senior Taliban leaders who send their daughters to elite overseas schools for education. Shooting your mouth off may be perfectly safe for you until somebody you're associated with falls out of favor.

        Beyond this, we tend to forget just how safe and how many freedoms we enjoy in modern western countries... Especially those who call them "nanny states" or the like.

        This tends to make people complacent about places they might go to where they can be arrested for things they did in other countries (erm... lets face it, a dictator doesn't really need a reason to arrest you, accountability is a function of a liberal society).

    • > Going back to SA after shooting her mouth off like that on the internet?

      Not very intelligent, is she.

    • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Thursday August 18, 2022 @12:54AM (#62799289)

      Going back to SA after shooting her mouth off like that on the internet? Did she forget the nature of her home country while living in the UK? The last guy who did that wound up in pieces, and he didnt even try to go back home - they actively hunted him down. If you leave a place like that and start speaking your mind, you make the new country your home and NEVER set foot in your birth country again. Ever.

      He was a well-known reporter who was a public opponent of the regime, she was a student with a Twitter account.

      I didn't see any examples of the tweets, but having known students from middle eastern countries I suspect she was far from unusual. While in a western country they feel more free to raise their voice about politics like westerners, and with very rare exceptions they're right.

      I suspect it was perfectly reasonable for her to think she could retweet a few activists while in the west and then stay offline while visiting back home. That's probably what students like her have been doing for years without incident.

      Unfortunately, MBS decided the expats were getting too loud in criticizing the regime from afar. So he told the prosecutors to draw a name out of the hat and hers was the unlucky name.

      I suspect her "activism" was probably pretty tame, and that's the point. If you target the loudest activists then everybody knows they just need to be quieter than that. If you target someone perfectly average then everybody knows they could be next.

      • I suspect it was perfectly reasonable for her to think she could retweet a few activists while in the west and then stay offline while visiting back home.

        Your "suspicion" (that's not how that word works, period) is unwarranted. That was not at all reasonable. It is the same stupid error as when people think that the government isn't recording their conversations because who would care about them? It's cheap, of course they are being recorded. Of course it's being scanned for keywords. Even if they "can't" do this to every call (they can) they could simply assign every call a score, and not only scan from the highest-scored calls on down, but also take a rand

    • The last guy who did that wound up in pieces, ...

      The last guy you heard about. They do this kind of crap all the time so lots of cases don't get press.

    • by lsllll ( 830002 )

      Going back to SA after shooting her mouth off like that on the internet? Did she forget the nature of her home country while living in the UK? The last guy who did that wound up in pieces, and he didnt even try to go back home - they actively hunted him down. If you leave a place like that and start speaking your mind, you make the new country your home and NEVER set foot in your birth country again. Ever.

      You took the words right out of my mouth. I've ran my mouth on FB and in my novel about the Iranian government and have admitted to being an atheist a couple of times on FB. Chances are the Iranian government has no idea about either, but I won't step foot in Iran for fear of being asked to unlock my phone and them seeing everything I've posted on FB, and to end up with a trumped up charge and becoming a prisoner swap target. Unless she was trying to make a point and actually get arrested, she was pretty

      • by GlennC ( 96879 )

        I guess politics trumps standing up for your citizens.

        Welcome to the United States. I'm sorry that you had to find this fact out the hard way.

      • Life is actually pretty cheap in the US. At the federal level, the US government generally wont interfere with your life, but it also doesnt offer much in the way of protection or hand-holding either, beyond keeping the worlds strongest military. Start a company or write a book? Congrats. Reap your rewards. Play with dynamite and blow your arm off? Travel to another country and run into trouble with the local authorities. Too bad so sad thats on you buddy. I know this is a drastic oversimplification. Just p
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Even moving to another country wouldn't save her from SA's agents. They whacked the Khashoggi in Turkey. They've sent their agents to Canada on an aborted mission. SA and their tin pot defacto ruler don't care.

    • Well, she wasn't immediately killed, so that's some improvement.
      • Well, she wasn't immediately killed, so that's some improvement.

        Jeezus K Ryste. you actually make a very valid point!

    • Even the embassies aren't really safe.

  • by ihaveamo ( 989662 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @09:12PM (#62798957)
    I'm not saying that's good or bad...... who am I kidding. It's bad.
  • by v1 ( 525388 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @09:20PM (#62798975) Homepage Journal

    On one hand I feel sorry for someone being handed what I consider to be a much harsher punishment than fits the crime, but on the other hand, what was she expecting would happen?

    You just don't go running your mouth off in a theocracy or autocracy. Every one of them is brutal on political dissidence, it's what keeps them in power and they've gotten good at it over the years. This should surprise NO ONE. Practically speaking she's lucky they didn't brutally execute her.

    You don't jump into the gorilla cage and punch the gorilla, you don't take a selfie from inside a tornado, and you don't run your mouth in Saudi Arabia.

    Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.

    • Re:mixed feelings (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday August 18, 2022 @12:10AM (#62799239)

      Old Soviet joke:

      Don't think.
      If you think, don't talk.
      If you think and talk, don't write.
      If you think, talk and write, don't sign.
      If you think, talk, write and sign, don't be surprised.

      It works in pretty much any repressive dictatorship.

      • Re:mixed feelings (Score:4, Informative)

        by MacMann ( 7518492 ) on Thursday August 18, 2022 @03:11AM (#62799423)

        I saw a video with Jordan Peterson where he explained compelled speech is the first step to totalitarian government. First is the little lies. Then a slightly bigger lie. They compel people to say what is not true in order to train the mind into eventually agreeing with the absurd. A simple lie might be, a man is a woman, and a woman is a man.

        I saw people screaming, "Trans-women are women!" But you see, they are telling you this is a lie from the start. If a trans-woman was a woman then the shouting should be, "Women are women!" For any of this to make sense we'd have to agree on how to define a woman. What is a woman? Is a trans-woman a woman? If so then why the "trans-" modifier?

        Lets go with a bad car analogy. If I say I have a red car then I'm still describing a car but narrowing this to a color. I could similarly narrow the definition or description of a woman by age, height, color of their skin or eyes, her occupation, her personality, her location or position. None of those modifiers make her anything other than a woman. If I have a model car then I know it's not an actual car but a simulation that approximates a car in some way. A kiddy car will get a small person somewhere, but no faster than an adult could run after it, and only as far as the batter charge will take it. A model woman is an inanimate object that is the size and shape of a woman. This is opposed to a woman model, a woman that is hired to show of clothing much like a model woman might.

        Totalitarian governments live on the requirement of people lying to each other and to themselves. Bring truth to such a government and it will unravel. Don't let the government compel you to say what is not true. Do that and it could lead to far worse you'd be compelled to agree to. This isn't a slippery slope argument since we use euphemisms all the time. Being polite is not necessarily a lie. Choosing to lie, especially if the intent is to merely be polite, might not do any real harm. It is when the government compels a lie that we are taking steps down a dark path. The sooner we reject the lie the easier it will be to reject the lie. Wait too long and the truth will bring punishment.

  • The two USAs (Score:5, Interesting)

    by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @09:23PM (#62798983) Journal
    One America is talks a lot about freedom of women, atrocities against them and in general does lots of talk about democracy and human rights.

    The other America cares nothing about all these things and coddles dictatorships and autocracies to make money and stay in power

    There was a groundswell of opinion against Saudi Arabia after 9/11. If America was serious about kicking its oil addiction that was a ripe time. People would put up with lots of pain to get rid of oil dependency. But, Dick Cheney and George W Bush were both oil men, and they protected Oil over America.

    The democracy talking America, wrings its hands and is dismayed India is degenerating into violent nationalism. But all those years it was not led by violent nationalist party, was there any praise for it? We never heard anything good about India back then, did nothing to help the non violent party of Gandhi.

    While we bemoan the unfair jailing of this woman, we will continue to buy gas guzzlers and demand the politicians to keep gasoline prices low.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by iggymanz ( 596061 )

      Are you living in the past, Saudi Arabia was a measly five percent of oil imports last year to USA, they're optional and and tiny slice of the pie. Yeah half a century ago when I was a kid they were 30 percent. Those days are long gone, Elmer.

      We are in no way shape or form dependent on Saudi Arabia.

      • Re:The two USAs (Score:5, Interesting)

        by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @11:16PM (#62799151)

        Are you living in the past, Saudi Arabia was a measly five percent of oil imports last year to USA, they're optional and and tiny slice of the pie... We are in no way shape or form dependent on Saudi Arabia.

        All the more reason the US should be ashamed of not denouncing the Saudis for their behaviour and not severing ties with them. But we know the States will not do either of these things. So America either has some strong economic reason for maintaining a cozy relationship with the Saudis, or simply doesn't give a shit about human rights in other countries. Maybe both.

        • the US should be ashamed of not denouncing the Saudis for their behaviour and not severing ties with them.

          We started to do that when Biden took office. Then Europe got desperate for oil and we changed course.

        • Re:The two USAs (Score:4, Interesting)

          by nagora ( 177841 ) on Thursday August 18, 2022 @04:02AM (#62799479)

          So America either has some strong economic reason for maintaining a cozy relationship with the Saudis, or simply doesn't give a shit about human rights in other countries. Maybe both.

          Bottom line is: US stops supporting SA, then Russia will step in and expand its toe-hold in the area to a substantial base. Because the Saudis won't find Putin repulsive, will they?

          Realpolitik is a bitch.

          • Ahahah it is indeed. Saudi Arabia is more useful as an ally. The alternative is the expansion of Iranian power. The Russians are a bit busy right now, but China wouldn't mind seeing Iran expand its foothold in the Middle East, at least to keep its enemies busy.

            Honestly, the idea that we're supposed to be upset with the Saudis now when they've been abusing their own citizens for ages is comical. Especially when the regional alternative is Iran (basically).

            • by nagora ( 177841 )

              Ahahah it is indeed. Saudi Arabia is more useful as an ally. The alternative is the expansion of Iranian power. The Russians are a bit busy right now, but China wouldn't mind seeing Iran expand its foothold in the Middle East, at least to keep its enemies busy.

              Honestly, the idea that we're supposed to be upset with the Saudis now when they've been abusing their own citizens for ages is comical. Especially when the regional alternative is Iran (basically).

              Don't forget the Russian involvement in Syria, and if SA switched allegiance it's not like the Russians would need much by way of boots on the ground, unlike in Ukraine.

          • by mjwx ( 966435 )

            So America either has some strong economic reason for maintaining a cozy relationship with the Saudis, or simply doesn't give a shit about human rights in other countries. Maybe both.

            Bottom line is: US stops supporting SA, then Russia will step in and expand its toe-hold in the area to a substantial base. Because the Saudis won't find Putin repulsive, will they?

            Realpolitik is a bitch.

            You're saying they have to be someone's bitch so it's better that they're our bitch...

            The problem with that is that the bitch in question needs to know they're the bitch and dependent on our good graces (like North Korea is to China). The Saudis know that the Russians won't be half as nice to them as the west.

            The problem is mainly that certain "politicians" are pretty much openly accepting bribes from the Saudis (Politicians is in sarcastic quotes because they are as much politicians as they are busin

      • The USA needs petroleum. Even if the plan is to be rid of petroleum long term then there still is the immediate need for petroleum. By all appearance the Biden administration has been hobbling the American petroleum industry while going to foreign nations to ask them to produce more petroleum. There's something of an open secret that Saudi Arabia is running out of oil. This is part of the reason they are building nuclear power plants, to reduce domestic consumption so those products can be sold.

        The USA

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Just for clarity, the U.S. does import oil, but that is because not all oil is created equal. Some kinds of refining require certain grade that the U.S. does not produce. So even though the U.S. is a net exporter, it must still import, though those imports are not a lot.

        • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

          To be even more clear for certain grades of crude oil it would be madness to refine into fuel for ICE's to burn. They are too high a quality to be wasted in such a manner and are used as feedstock to make things. Basically a barrel of oil is *NOT* fungible.

    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      The difference is that we were heavily reliant on SA for not only oil, but military needs in the Middle East. You can claim it's all about profits if you like (you're wrong, but whatever). You can't just kick our "oil addiction" either. It's not a switch to be flipped, it taking years, just to get people out of their gas guzzlers, even paying triple at the fuel pumps.

    • Realpolitik is a bitch.

  • by nuckfuts ( 690967 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @09:32PM (#62799001)
    There was once an age of enlightenment, where philosophes debated how best to improve human society, including systems of justice. Everyday now when I read the news, I'm convinced that we're devolving into a less enlightened society where ignorance, intolerance, and brutality are becoming the new norms.
    • Still progressing (Score:5, Informative)

      by virtig01 ( 414328 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @09:49PM (#62799035)

      People forget that during the Enlightenment, the majority of people were not enlightened. It was like, 200 guys.

      Over the centuries, liberal values have been adopted by far more people. Just not by everyone. But it never was adopted by everyone. We're still progressing, even with headlines like this.

      • Are we progressing though? In US culture I'm constantly hearing terms like "liberal" used as an insult.
      • Liberal values (beyond basic freedoms) are mostly a media and lefty fantasy. Poll most adults even in the west whether they support the death penalty, whether they think a guy in a dress is a woman or whether LGBT should be promoted in schools and see what answer you get.

        • by splutty ( 43475 )

          No. Who cares. Yes.

          These are the answers a majority of people would give in my country, which is in the West.

          • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

            You mean thats the answer you and your friends would give.

            • by splutty ( 43475 )

              Yeah. Let's go with that. Because nothing like that ever gets researched, or put into politics, or into law, or whatever.

    • Since when were the Saudis enlightened?

    • Everyday now when I read the news, I'm convinced that we're devolving into a less enlightened society where ignorance, intolerance, and brutality are becoming the new norms.

      If you didn't feel that way the press wouldn't be doing its job. If you are not continuously frightened and or outraged (preferably both) money is being left on the table.

  • Salma al-Shehab, 34, a mother of two young children, was initially sentenced to serve three years in prison for the âoecrimeâ of using an internet website to âoecause public unrest and destabilise civil and national securityâ. But an appeals court on Monday handed down the new sentence â" 34 years in prison followed by a 34-year travel ban â" after a public prosecutor asked the court to consider other alleged crimes. By all accounts, Shehab was not a leading or especially voca
  • In the fine article they pointed out that President Biden visited Saudi Arabia to secure access to energy resources and trade routes. Tell me something, what kind of energy resources? What would be traded on these trade routes? Something tells me that this wasn't to keep imports of windmills and solar panels from being interrupted. Even if this trip were to keep windmills and solar panels flowing in then perhaps the USA should be working on being able to produce enough windmills and solar panels domesti

    • For you this might be 4D chess.
      Oil is globally traded and USA oil prices reflect the global market even if most the oil is local. Why should your free-market oilman sell you cheap oil when he can ship it to the highest paying customer? patriotism? lol!

      Pelosi's rule back from the Obama days basically banned exporting and combined with Obama setting expiration dates on unused drill permits the prices inside the USA tanked. Somehow we can't restore Pelosi's law today (Trump had it repealed.) Biden forcing m

      • I read the words in your post but could not follow. Maybe I'm tired, maybe you are drunk, maybe both, maybe vice versa. Maybe your typing isn't keeping up with your thoughts and you left out important details.

        I can pick out one part that kind of makes sense and answer that, why sell oil cheap when it could be shipped elsewhere for a higher price? Because it costs money to ship oil and the higher price would not make up the difference. Canada wants the pipeline to Texas because it means lower costs and a

    • In the fine article they pointed out that President Biden visited Saudi Arabia to secure access to energy resources and trade routes. Tell me something, what kind of energy resources? What would be traded on these trade routes?

      Oil to Europe, and Patriot missiles to Saudi Arabia.

  • ...so we don't have to depend on these bastards and tolerate this kind of thing.
  • Twitter is too insecure, politically ran, and monopoly-leaning for any government to use it.
  • and yet both sides of politics in the US treat them as a valued ally and friend. It is a disgrace that human rights mean less to the government than oil and arms deals.
  • I used to be a pretty staunch supporter of moral relativism. As I get older, my enthusiasm is decreasingly pretty quickly. ...as is my tolerance for... everything? I'm going for "crotchety" in retirement, but I might arrive early.

    • ... supporter of moral relativism.

      Conventional morality is not better. For instance, "Do not kill: The political right inserts exceptions for the death penalty and invading other countries. Saying someone does not have a right, means it is not absolute. "Do not kill" can still be limited by other rights such as self-defense of person or country (which is how governments justify assassinations/drone-strikes).

  • I guess the poster tried hard to write something that's least informative, most misleading and most attention grabbing.

  • He still has time to get her an extra five years
  • We could send a gay Jewish woman to shake hands with the Saudi Prince if he wanted weapons.
    Huh, now that I think about it, a Hindi woman like Tulsi Gabbard as President would be enough to create an awkward meet and greet for a misogynist who had contempt for non-Abrahamic religions.

  • ...medieval allies believe in freedom. Together, they've brought democracy to Afghanistan, Iraq, Ukraine, Somalia, Libya, Yemen, & Syria, freeing their peoples from evil oppression. The USA exports & shares its freedom bombs all over the world. God bless America!
  • That was stupid of her, Salma al-Shehab was a PhD candidate at the University of Leeds. Apparently they don't teach common sense.
  • SA is the model for what the repubs want.

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