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Saudi fugitive 'deported' from Qatar

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Saudi fugitive deported from Qatar

Qatari authorities confirmed the deportation.

He had faced charges at an anti-terrorism court in Saudi Arabia.

Published: Tue 30 May 2017, 10:56 PM

Updated: Wed 31 May 2017, 11:34 AM

Qatar has deported a Saudi fugitive who is said to be on his way to Norway where he hoped to seek asylum.
Mohammed Al Otaibi, 49, fled to Qatar in March after he had faced charges at an anti-terrorism court in Saudi Arabia.
Qatari authorities confirmed the deportation. The official Qatar News Agency (QNA) said that the deportation had been confirmed by a foreign ministry source.
"The extradition was... based on legal procedures and regional and international agreements relating to the extradition of accused persons and criminals," the agency said. This seems to be a belated attempt by Qatar to allay Saudi Arabia's concerns over harbouring anti-Saudi campaigners in Doha.
First arrested in 2009, Otaibi in 2013 co-founded the Union for Human Rights in Riyadh. Authorities ordered it shut after about one month, but he continued his work, issuing reports and giving television interviews, the Gulf Center said.
New York-based Human Rights Watch warned in April that Otaibi would be at risk of a long prison sentence and possible ill-treatment if forcibly returned to Saudi Arabia.
On a visit to the kingdom early this month, a United Nations special rapporteur, Ben Emmerson, strongly condemned Saudi Arabia for using counter-terrorism legislation and penal sanctions "against individuals peacefully exercising their rights to freedom of expression", religion, or association.
Saudi Arabia says that human rights are a matter of definition and "values" from one country should not be imposed.
It says the kingdom has made great strides in rights to education, healthcare and other areas.
The move to deport Otaibi comes at a particularly sensitive time in relations between Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
Reports last week said Qatar's leader, Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, made explosive remarks on state media criticising Gulf policy towards Iran, essentially putting Doha at odds with Riyadh.
But Doha maintains the Qatar News Agency website was hacked and no such comments were made by the emir.
The incident has pushed relations between the two countries to the lowest level for several years.
Qatari news sites were subsequently blocked in countries across the region, including Saudi Arabia.
In a further sign of a deepening rift between the two countries, the Saudi newspaper Okaz has reported that members of a prominent Saudi family demanded Qatar's state mosque, the Sheikh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahhab Mosque, be renamed.
The demand came amid questions over the Qatari royal family's link to Abdul Wahhab, co-founder of the Saudi state. - AFP



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