France/Saudi Arabia: Sarkozy Should Raise Human Rights Issues in Saudi Arabia
Source: Human Rights Watch
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(Paris, January 11, 2008) – French President Nicolas Sarkozy should use his January 13-14 visit to Saudi Arabia to raise human rights concerns with Saudi's King Abdullah, Human Rights Watch said today. The Saudi government denies its citizens basic rights to free speech, assembly and association, commits abuses with impunity, and systematically discriminates against migrant workers, women and religious minorities. France says its "strategic partnership" with Saudi Arabia is based on the "convergence of views on the vast majority of international issues and quality personal relations at the highest level.""Saudi Arabia's regional importance and the lucrative foreign contracts available there shouldn't stop President Sarkozy from speaking out about its pervasive human rights abuses," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "Saudi Arabia represses dissidents, women and minorities, tortures prisoners, and mistreats migrant workers. France shouldn't put business deals ahead of people's human rights." In December 2006, Human Rights Watch carried out the first independent fact-finding mission by an international human rights group to the kingdom, which has not acceded to the two fundamental human rights treaties, the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights and the International Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Human Rights Watch notes many concerns, including:
- Saudi Arabia has no written penal code, and law enforcement agencies and courts rely on vague and overly broad notions of criminal acts.
- Saudi Arabia regularly denies its citizens the right to free association, peaceful assembly and free expression.
- Torture remains common for criminal defendants before trial and detainees in prison, as captured on an April 2007 video.
- The kingdom carried out 156 beheadings in 2007, compared to 40 in 2006, including for "crimes" such as witchcraft and apostasy. Migrant workers face discriminatory laws and practices.
- The Saudi system of male legal guardianship denies women their fundamental rights. Women must obtain permission from their fathers, husbands, or even sons, acting as male guardians to work, travel, study, marry, receive health care, and access government agencies, such as when they seek protection or redress as victims of domestic violence.
- Shi'a in the Eastern Province and Isma'ilis in Najran report official discrimination in employment, judicial affairs, religious practices and land grants.
- issuing a moratorium on the death penalty, or at least restricting its applicability only to the most serious crimes, and never for juveniles;
- issuing a penal code that does not criminalize protected human rights and provides serious consequences for officials complicit in acts of torture or ill-treatment;
- issuing legislation that protects the right to freedom of association, assembly and expression, in line with international standards and best practices;
- abolishing the sponsorship system for migrant workers;
- abolishing the system of male legal guardianship over women and taking steps to facilitate women's access to government services, including protection from domestic violence and the judiciary; and,
- ending discrimination in all areas against religious minorities, especially Shi'a and Isma'ili citizens.








