DUBAI, United Arab Emirates A U.S. human rights watchdog that sent a team to Saudi Arabia to investigate abuses said in a new report the kingdom keeps thousands of prisoners in jail without charge, sentences children to die and oppresses women.
New York-based Human Rights Watch said it had been invited by Saudi authorities to conduct a four-week mission that started in December. Its 13-person team, led by executive director Kenneth Roth, operated under 24-hour surveillance and was blocked at times from observing trials and visiting jails, according to the report released Saturday.
But the group also said it gained unprecedented access to senior officials among the judiciary, police and enforcers of Islamic law. In some areas, including Riyadh and Jiddah, researchers did not have government escorts, HRW said.
"The Saudi government's invitation to Human Rights Watch reflects a newfound openness toward discussing domestic human rights issues," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "By restricting our access to prisons and withholding general permission to observe trials, however, the Saudi government gave the appearance that it still has much to hide."
Saudi secret police hold thousands of political prisoners for years without charge or trial, the report alleged. They include some suspected of ties to the Iraqi insurgency.
It said prisoners at al-Ha'ir prison south of Riyadh reported physical abuse and said they remained locked up long after their sentences expired.
The rights group also said children are jailed for minor offenses, including vague "morals" charges, and face beatings and solitary confinement. Children as young as 13 have been sentenced to die, though the report did not say what they had been sentenced for.
The report also found Saudi courts offer criminal defendants few opportunities to defend themselves and said many are found guilty with little supporting evidence. Trials remain closed despite laws declaring they are open to the public, and judges commonly pronounce guilty verdicts based on little evidence, it said.
Attempts to reach the Saudi Information Ministry for comment on Sunday were unsuccessful and Saudi authorities do not usually respond to allegations of rights abuses.
The State Department in the past has called the U.S. ally's human rights record "poor overall," and alleged security forces abuse prisoners.
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