Report on Human Rights
Practices for 1999
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia is a monarchy without elected representative
institutions or political parties. It is ruled by King Fahd Bin Abd Al-Aziz Al
Saud, a son of King Abd Al-Aziz Al Saud, who unified the country in the early
20th century. Since the death of King Abd Al-Aziz, the King and Crown Prince
have been chosen from among his sons, who themselves have had preponderant
influence in the choice. A 1992 royal decree reserves for the King exclusive
power to name the Crown Prince. Crown Prince Abdullah has played an increasing
role in governance since King Fahd suffered from a stroke in 1995. The
Government has declared the Islamic holy book the Koran, and the Sunna
(tradition) of the Prophet Muhammad, to be the country's Constitution. The
Government bases its legitimacy on governance according to the precepts of a
rigorously conservative form of Islam. Neither the Government nor the society
in general accepts the concept of separation of religion and state. The
Government prohibits the establishment of political parties and suppresses
opposition views. In 1992 King Fahd appointed a Consultative Council and
similar provincial assemblies. The Consultative Council began holding sessions
in 1993 and was expanded in 1997. The judiciary is generally independent but
is subject to influence by the executive branch and members of the royal
family.
Police and border forces under the Ministry of Interior are
responsible for internal security. The Mutawaa'in, or religious police,
constitute the Committee to Prevent Vice and Promote Virtue, a semiautonomous
agency that enforces adherence to Islamic norms by monitoring public behavior.
The Government maintains general control of the security forces. However,
members of the security forces committed human rights abuses.
The oil industry has fueled the transformation of Saudi
Arabia from a pastoral, agricultural, and commercial society to a rapidly
urbanizing one characterized by large-scale infrastructure projects, an
extensive social welfare system, and a labor market comprised largely of
foreign workers. Oil revenues account for around 40 percent of the gross
domestic product (GDP) and 75 percent of government income. Agriculture
accounts for only about 9 percent of GDP. Government spending, including
spending on the national airline, power, water, telephone, education, and
health services, accounts for 24 percent of GDP. About 40 percent of the
economy is nominally private, and the Government is promoting further
privatization of the economy. In 1995 the Government began an aggressive
campaign to increase the number of Saudi nationals represented in the public
and private work forces. The campaign has restricted employment of some
categories of foreign workers by limiting certain occupations to Saudis only,
increasing fees for some types of work visas, and setting minimum wages for
some job categories in order to increase the cost to employers of non-Saudi
labor. In August 1998, the Government announced that Saudi citizens must
constitute at least 5 percent of the work force in private sector companies by
October 1998, an amount that, according to a 1995 ministerial decree, should
be 15 percent. The Government's 1997 offer of a limited amnesty under which
illegal residents could depart the country without penalty was followed up in
1998 and during the year by a crackdown on illegal workers and the Saudis who
employ or house them.
The Government commits and tolerates serious human rights
abuses. Citizens have neither the right nor the legal means to change their
government. Security forces continued to abuse detainees and prisoners,
arbitrarily arrest and detain persons, and facilitate incommunicado detention;
in addition there were allegations that security forces committed torture.
Prolonged detention without charge is a problem. Security forces committed
such abuses, in contradiction to the law, but with the acquiescence of the
Government. Mutawaa'in continued to intimidate, abuse, and detain citizens and
foreigners. The Government infringes on citizens' privacy rights. The
Government prohibits or restricts freedom of speech, the press, assembly,
association, religion, and movement. Other continuing problems included
discrimination and violence against women, discrimination against ethnic and
religious minorities, and strict limitations on worker rights. The Government
disagrees with internationally accepted definitions of human rights and views
its interpretation of Islamic law as its sole source of guidance on human
rights.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1. Respect for the Integrity of the Person,
Including Freedom From:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
There were no reports of political or other extrajudicial
killings during the year.
In November 1998, several Mutawaa'in attacked and killed an
elderly Shi'a prayer leader in Hofuf for repeating the call to prayer twice (a
traditional Shi'a practice). Mutawaa'in attempts to cover up the killing were
unsuccessful. The Government reportedly is investigating the incident;
however, the Government does not make public the results of investigations
involving its personnel (see Sections 2.c. and 5.).
The investigation of the 1996 Al-Khobar bombing, which
killed 19 U.S. servicemen, continued. The Government has not yet issued a
report of its findings.
b. Disappearance
There were no reports of politically motivated
disappearances.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment
There were credible reports that the authorities abused
detainees, both citizens and foreigners. Ministry of Interior officials are
responsible for most incidents of abuse, including beatings and sleep
deprivation. In addition, there were allegations of torture. Although the
Government has ratified the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, it has refused to recognize the
authority of the Committee Against Torture to investigate alleged abuses. In
April 1998, the Government pledged to cooperate with U.N. human rights
mechanisms. However, although the Government asks for details of reports of
torture and other human rights abuses made by international human rights
groups, it does not permit international observers to investigate them. The
Government's general refusal to grant members of diplomatic missions access to
the Ministry of Interior detention facilities, or allow members of
international human rights groups into the country, hinders efforts to confirm
or discount reports of abuses. The Government's past failure to criticize
human rights abuses has contributed to the public perception that security
forces can commit abuses with impunity.
According to Amnesty International, in April a 70-year-old
journalist reportedly was beaten during interrogation after his return to the
country from Bahrain (see Section 2.a.).
Although the number of reports of harassment by the
Mutawaa'in remained relatively low in comparison with previous years, the
Mutawaa'in continued to intimidate, abuse, and detain citizens and foreigners
of both sexes (see Section l.d.).
The Government punishes criminals according to its
interpretation of Islamic law, or Shari'a. Punishments include flogging,
amputation, and execution by beheading, stoning, or firing squad. The
authorities acknowledged 100 executions during the year, a substantial
increase from 25 in 1998, but less than the 134 reported in 1997. Executions
included 36 men for murder (29 Saudis and 7 foreigners), 40 men for
narcotics-related offenses (2 Saudis and 38 foreigners), 3 men for
gang-related activities (2 Saudis and 1 foreigner), 8 men for rape (7 Saudis
and 1 foreigner), 10 men for armed robbery (7 Saudis and 3 foreigners), and 3
women for narcotics-related offenses (all foreigners). The men were executed
by beheading and the women were executed by firing squad. There were no
executions by stoning. In accordance with Shari'a, the authorities may punish
repeated thievery by amputation of the right hand. There were two reports of
multiple amputations (right hand, left leg) for the crime of highway robbery
during the year. The amputations were carried out against two Saudi men.
Persons convicted of less serious offenses, such as alcohol related offenses
or being alone in the company of an unrelated person of the opposite sex,
sometimes were punished by flogging with a cane.
Prison and jail conditions vary throughout the Kingdom.
Prisons generally meet internationally accepted standards and provide
air-conditioned cells, good nutrition, regular exercise, and careful
patrolling by prison guards. However, some police station jails are
overcrowded and unsanitary. Authorities generally allowed family members
access to detainees.
Boards of Investigation and Public Prosecution, organized
on a regional basis, were established by King Fahd in 1993. The members of
these boards have the right to inspect prisons, review prisoners' files, and
hear their complaints. However, the Government does not permit human rights
monitors to visit prisons or jails. The Government does not allow impartial
observers of any type access to specialized Ministry of Interior prisons,
where it detains persons accused of political subversion.
Representatives of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) are present at the Rafha refugee camp, which houses former
Iraqi prisoners of war and civilians who fled Iraq following the Gulf War.
According to UNHCR officials, there was no systematic abuse of refugees by
camp guards. When isolated instances of abuse have surfaced in the past, the
authorities have been responsive and willing to investigate allegations and
reprimand offending guards. The camp receives a high level of material
assistance and is comparatively comfortable and well run. However, the
Government generally confines refugees to the camp except in the event of
approved emigration.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
The law prohibits arbitrary arrest; however, officers make
arrests and detain persons without following explicit legal guidelines. There
are few procedures to safeguard against abuse. There have been few cases of
citizens successfully obtaining judicial redress for abuse of the Government's
power of arrest and detention. During the year, a citizen successfully sued a
government official for wrongful imprisonment and was awarded compensation,
while the government official was imprisoned.
In accordance with a 1983 Ministry of Interior regulation,
authorities usually detain suspects for no longer than 3 days before charging
them. However, serious exceptions have been reported. The regulation also has
provisions for bail for less serious crimes. Also, authorities sometimes
release detainees on the recognizance of a patron or sponsoring employer
without the payment of bail. If they are not released, authorities typically
detain accused persons for an average of 2 months before sending the case to
trial or, in the case of some foreigners, summarily deporting them. There is
no established procedure providing detainees the right to inform their family
of their arrest.
The Mutawaa'in have the authority to detain persons for no
more than 24 hours for violations of the strict standards of proper dress and
behavior. However, they sometimes exceeded this limit before delivering
detainees to the police (see Section l.f.). Current procedures require a
police officer to accompany the Mutawaa'in at the time of an arrest.
Mutawaa'in generally complied with this requirement. During the year, in the
more conservative Riyadh district, the number of reports received of
Mutawaa'in accosting, abusing, arresting, and detaining persons alleged to
have violated dress and behavior standards was the same as in 1998. The Jeddah
district also received a similar number of reports as in the previous year.
In October the Government detained 13 Filipino Christians
in connection with a large prayer service held by their congregation (see
Section 2.c.).
Political detainees who are arrested by the General
Directorate of Investigation (GDI), the Ministry of Interior's security
service, commonly are held incommunicado in special prisons during the initial
phase of an investigation, which may last weeks or months. The GDI allows the
detainees only limited contact with their families or lawyers.
The authorities may detain without charge persons who
publicly criticize the Government, or may charge them with attempting to
destabilize the Government (see Sections 2.a. and 3). The authorities in June
released Salman Al-Awdah and Safar Al-Hawali, Muslim clerics who were arrested
in September 1994 for publicly criticizing the Government. Their detention
that year sparked protest demonstrations that resulted in the arrest of 157
persons for antigovernment activities. All now have been released.
In January the Government released, under its annual
Ramadan amnesty, over 7,000 prisoners and detainees, including over 3,000
foreigners convicted or held for minor offenses.
The total number of political detainees cannot be
determined precisely, but it is estimated at less than 200 persons by
international human rights organizations.
Since beginning the investigation of the 1996 bombing of a
U.S. military facility in Saudi Arabia, authorities have detained,
interrogated, and confiscated the passports of a number of Shi'a Muslims
suspected of fundamentalist tendencies or Iranian sympathies. The Government
reportedly still holds in jail an unknown number of Shi'a arrested in the
aftermath of the bombing. Government security forces reportedly arrest Shi'a
on the smallest suspicion, hold them in custody for lengthy periods, and then
release them without explanation (see Section 2.c.).
The Government did not use forced exile, and it did not
revoke citizenship for political purposes during the year. However, it
previously has revoked the citizenship of opponents of the Government who
reside outside the country, such as Mohammed Al-Masari (see Section 3) and
Osama Bin Ladin, a suspect in organizing terrorist activities, including the
August 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The independence of the judiciary is prescribed by law and
usually is respected in practice; however, judges occasionally accede to the
influence of the executive branch, particularly members of the royal family
and their associates, who are not required to appear before the courts.
Moreover, the Ministry of Justice exercises judicial, financial, and
administrative control of the courts.
The legal system is based on Shari'a. Shari'a courts
exercise jurisdiction over common criminal cases and civil suits regarding
marriage, divorce, child custody, and inheritance. These courts base judgments
largely on the Koran and on the Sunna, another Islamic text. Cases involving
relatively small penalties are tried in Shari'a summary courts; more serious
crimes are adjudicated in Shari'a courts of common pleas. Appeals from Shari'a
courts are made to the courts of appeal.
Other civil proceedings, including those involving claims
against the Government and enforcement of foreign judgments, are held before
specialized administrative tribunals, such as the Commission for the
Settlement of Labor Disputes and the Board of Grievances.
The Government permits Shi'a Muslims to use their own legal
tradition to adjudicate noncriminal cases within their community.
The military justice system has jurisdiction over uniformed
personnel and civil servants who are charged with violations of military
regulations. The Minister of Defense and Aviation and the King review the
decisions of courts-martial.
The Supreme Judicial Council is not a court and may not
reverse decisions made by a court of appeals. However, the Council may review
lower court decisions and refer them back to the lower court for
reconsideration. Only the Supreme Judicial Council may discipline or remove a
judge. The King appoints the members of the Council.
The Council of Senior Religious Scholars is an autonomous
body of 20 senior religious jurists, including the Minister of Justice. It
establishes the legal principles to guide lower-court judges in deciding
cases.
Defendants usually appear without an attorney before a
judge, who determines guilt or innocence in accordance with Shari'a standards.
Defense lawyers may offer their clients advice before trial or may attend the
trial as interpreters for those unfamiliar with Arabic. The courts do not
provide foreign defendants with translators. Public defenders are not
provided. Individuals may choose any person to represent them by a power of
attorney filed with the court and the Ministry of Justice. Most trials are
closed. However, in a highly publicized 1997 case involving two foreign women
charged with murder, the Saudi court conducted preliminary matters and the
trial with relatively open and transparent procedures, including more
effective use of counsel, increased consular presence, and increased family
access.
A woman's testimony does not carry the same weight as that
of a man. In a Shari'a court, the testimony of one man equals that of two
women. In the absence of two witnesses, or four witnesses in the case of
adultery, confessions before a judge almost always are required for criminal
conviction--a situation that repeatedly has led prosecuting authorities to
coerce confessions from suspects by threats and abuse.
Sentencing is not uniform. Foreign residents sometimes
receive harsher penalties than citizens. Under Shari'a, as interpreted and
applied in Saudi Arabia, crimes against Muslims receive harsher penalties than
those against non-Muslims. In the case of wrongful death, the amount of
indemnity or "blood money" awarded to relatives varies with the
nationality, religion, and sex of the victim. A sentence may be changed at any
stage of review, except for punishments stipulated by the Koran. In a case
that was known widely but was not reported in the press, a member of the royal
family, who shot and killed two Mutawaa'in who had entered his property
without permission in October 1998, was allowed to pay "blood money"
to the family members of the Mutawaa'in instead of being charged with murder.
Provincial governors have the authority to exercise
leniency and reduce a judge's sentence. In general, members of the royal
family, and other powerful families, are not subject to the same rule of law
as ordinary citizens (see Section 1.a.). For example, judges do not have the
power to issue a warrant summoning any member of the royal family.
The King and his advisors review cases involving capital
punishment. The King has the authority to commute death sentences and grant
pardons, except for capital crimes committed against individuals. In such
cases, he may request the victim's next of kin to pardon the murderer--usually
in return for compensation from the family or the King.
There is insufficient information to determine the number
of political prisoners. The Government does not provide information on such
persons or respond to inquiries about them. Moreover, the Government conducts
closed trials for persons who may be political prisoners and in other cases
has detained persons incommunicado for long periods while under investigation.
f. Arbitrary Interference With Privacy, Family, Home, or
Correspondence
The Government infringes on these rights. The sanctity of
family life and the inviolability of the home are among the most fundamental
of Islamic precepts. Royal decrees announced in 1992 include provisions
calling for the Government to defend the home from unlawful intrusions.
Nonetheless, there are few protections from government interference with one's
privacy, family, home, or correspondence.
The police generally must demonstrate reasonable cause and
obtain permission from the provincial governor before searching a private
home; however, warrants are not required.
Customs officials routinely open mail and shipments to
search for contraband, including material deemed pornographic and non-Muslim
religious material. Customs officials confiscated or censored materials
considered offensive, including Christian Bibles and religious video tapes
(see Section 2.c.). The authorities also open mail and use informants and
wiretaps in internal security and criminal matters. Security forces used
wiretaps against foreigners suspected of alcohol-related offenses. Informants
(know as "umdas") report "seditious ideas" or
antigovernment activity in their neighborhoods to the Ministry of the
Interior.
The Government enforces most social and Islamic religious
norms, which are matters of law (see Section 5). Women may not marry
non-Saudis without government permission; men must obtain approval from the
Ministry of Interior to marry women from countries outside the six states of
the Gulf Cooperation Council. In accordance with Shari'a, women are prohibited
from marrying non-Muslims; men may marry Christians and Jews, as well as
Muslims.
Mutawaa'in practices and incidents of abuse varied widely
in different regions of the country, but were most numerous in the central
Nejd region. In certain areas, both the Mutawaa'in and religious vigilantes
acting on their own harassed, assaulted, battered, arrested, and detained
citizens and foreigners (see Section 1.d.). The Government requires the
Mutawaa'in to follow established procedures and to offer instruction in a
polite manner; however, Mutawaa'in did not always comply with the
requirements. The Government has not criticized publicly abuses by Mutawaa'in
and religious vigilantes, but has sought to curtail these abuses.
Mutawaa'in enforcement of strict standards of social
behavior included the closing of commercial establishments during the five
daily prayer observances, insisting upon compliance with strict norms of
public dress, and dispersing gatherings of women in public places. Mutawaa'in
frequently reproached Saudi and foreign women for failure to observe strict
dress codes, and arrested men and women found together who were not married or
closely related.
Some professors believe that informers monitor comments
made in university classrooms (see Section 2.a.).
Section 2. Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Government severely limits freedom of speech and the
press. The authorities do not countenance criticism of Islam, the ruling
family, or the Government. However, during the year, the authorities again
allowed the press some freedom to criticize governmental bodies and social
policies through editorial comments and cartoons. Persons whose criticisms
align them with an organized political opposition are subject to arrest and
detention until they confess to a crime or sign a statement promising not to
resume such criticisms, which is tantamount to a confession.
The print media are privately owned but publicly
subsidized. A 1982 media policy statement and a 1965 national security law
prohibit the dissemination of criticism of the Government. The media policy
statement urges journalists to uphold Islam, oppose atheism, promote Arab
interests, and preserve the cultural heritage of Saudi Arabia. The Ministry of
Information appoints, and may remove, the editors in chief. It also provides
guidelines to newspapers on controversial issues. The Government owns the
Saudi Press Agency (SPA), which expresses official government views.
Newspapers typically publish news on sensitive subjects,
such as crime or terrorism, only after it has been released by the SPA or when
it has been authorized by a senior government official. Two Saudi-owned,
London-based dailies, Ash-Sharq Al-Awsat and Al-Hayat, are widely distributed
and read in Saudi Arabia. Both newspapers tend to practice self-censorship in
order to comply with government restrictions on sensitive issues. The
authorities continue to censor stories about Saudi Arabia in the foreign
press. Censors may remove or blacken the offending articles, glue pages
together, or prevent certain issues of foreign publications from entering the
market. However, the Ministry of Information continued to relax its blackout
policy regarding politically sensitive news concerning Saudi Arabia reported
in the international media, although press restrictions on reporting of
domestic news remain very stringent. The Government's policy in this regard
appears to be motivated in part by pragmatic considerations: Saudi access to
outside sources of information, especially the Cable News Network (CNN) and
other satellite television channels, is increasingly widespread.
According to Amnesty International, in April a 70-year-old
journalist reportedly was beaten during interrogation after his return to the
country from Bahrain (see Section 1.c.).
The Government tightly restricts the entry of foreign
journalists into the Kingdom. The Government owns and operates the television
and radio companies. Government censors remove any reference to politics,
religions other than Islam, pork or pigs, alcohol, and sex from foreign
programs and songs.
There are well over 1 million satellite receiving dishes in
the country, which provide citizens with foreign broadcasts. The legal status
of these devices is ambiguous. The Government ordered a halt to their
importation in 1992 at the request of religious leaders who objected to
foreign programming being made available on satellite channels. In 1994 the
Government banned the sale, installation, and maintenance of dishes and
supporting devices, but the number of dishes continues to increase and
residents legally may subscribe to satellite decoding services that require a
dish.
The Government bans all books, magazines, and other
materials that it considers sexual or pornographic in nature. The Ministry of
Information compiles and updates a list of publications that are prohibited
from being sold in the country. Access to the Internet is available through
Saudi servers or through servers in other Gulf countries. The Government
attempts to block all web sites that it deems sexual, pornographic, or
otherwise offensive or un-Islamic. However, such web sites are accessible
readily from within the country.
The Government censors all forms of public artistic
expression and prohibits cinemas and public musical or theatrical
performances, except those that are considered folkloric.
Academic freedom is restricted. The authorities prohibit
the study of evolution, Freud, Marx, Western music, and Western philosophy.
Some professors believe that informers monitor their classroom comments and
report to government and religious authorities.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Government strictly limits freedom of assembly. It
prohibits public demonstrations as a means of political expression. Public
meetings are segregated by sex. Unless meetings are sponsored by diplomatic
missions or approved by the appropriate governor, foreign residents who seek
to hold unsegregated meetings risk arrest and deportation. The authorities
monitor any large gathering of persons, especially of women. The Mutawaa'in
dispersed groups of women found in public places, such as restaurants.
Government policy permits women to attend cultural and social events at
diplomatic chanceries and residences only if they are accompanied by a father,
brother, or husband. However, in practice police often implement the policy in
an arbitrary manner. On many occasions during the year, authorities actively
prohibited women from entering diplomatic chanceries or residences to attend
cultural events and lectures. However, in May for the second year in a row,
authorities allowed unescorted Saudi women to attend a women-only cultural
event hosted at a diplomatic mission.
The Government strictly limits freedom of association. It
prohibits the establishment of political parties or any type of opposition
group (see Section 3). By its power to license associations, the Government
ensures that groups conform to public policy.
c. Freedom of Religion
Freedom of religion does not exist. Islam is the official
religion, and all citizens must be Muslims. The Government prohibits the
public practice of other religions. Private non-Muslim worship is permitted.
Conversion by a Muslim to another religion is considered
apostasy. Public apostasy is a crime under Shari'a and punishable by death.
Islamic practice generally is limited to that of the
Wahhabi order, which adheres to the Hanbali school of the Sunni branch of
Islam as interpreted by Muhammad Ibn Al-Wahab, an 18th century religious
reformer. Practices contrary to this interpretation, such as visits to the
tombs of renowned Muslims, are discouraged.
The Ministry of Islamic Affairs directly supervises, and is
a major source of funds for, the construction and maintenance of almost all
mosques in the country. The Ministry pays the salaries of imams (prayer
leaders) and others who work in the mosques. A governmental committee is
responsible for defining the qualifications of imams. The Mutawaa'in receive
their funding from the Government, and the general president of the Mutawaa'in
holds the rank of cabinet minister. During the year, foreign imams were barred
from leading worship during the most heavily attended prayer times and
prohibited from delivering sermons during Friday congregational prayers. The
Government claims that its actions were part of its Saudiization plan to
replace foreign workers with citizens.
The Shi'a Muslim minority (roughly 500,000 of nearly 14
million citizens) lives mostly in the eastern province. Its members are the
objects of officially sanctioned political and economic discrimination (see
Section 5). However, the Government for the first time appointed a Shi'a
ambassador. Prior to 1990, the Government prohibited Shi'a public processions
during the Islamic month of Muharram and restricted other processions and
congregations to designated areas in the major Shi'a cities. Since 1990 the
authorities have permitted marches on the Shi'a holiday of Ashura, provided
that the marchers do not display banners or engage in self-flagellation.
Ashura commemorations took place during the year, again without incident, as
in the previous year. The Government seldom permits private construction of
Shi'a mosques. The Shi'a have declined government offers to build
state-supported mosques because the Government would prohibit the
incorporation and display of Shi'a motifs in any such mosques.
In November 1998 several Mutawaa'in attacked and killed an
elderly Shi'a prayer leader in Hofuf for repeating the call to prayer twice (a
traditional Shi'a practice). Mutawaa'in attempts to cover up the killing were
unsuccessful. The Government reportedly is investigating the incident;
however, the Government does not make public the results of investigations
involving its personnel (see Sections 1.a. and 5).
The Government reportedly still holds in jail an unknown
number of Shi'a who were arrested in the aftermath of the Al-Khobar bombing.
Government security forces reportedly arrest Shi'a on the smallest suspicion,
hold them in custody for lengthy periods, and then release them without
explanation (see Section 1.d.).
The Government does not permit public non-Muslim religious
activities. Non-Muslim worshippers risk arrest, lashing, and deportation for
engaging in overt religious activity that attracts official attention. In 1997
for the first time, a senior Saudi leader stated publicly that the Government
does not "prevent" private non-Muslim religious worship in the home.
Such private non-Muslim worship occurs on a wide scale through the country,
including on the premises of several embassies. Other high level Saudi
authorities have stated that the Government's policy allows for private
non-Muslim worship and that the Government does not sanction investigation or
harassment of such private worship services. However, on October 8, the
Mutawaa'in detained 13 Filipino Christians after raiding their worship
services because of reports that two congregations recently had held a prayer
service for 1,000 persons. The detained Christians all were released by
October 31, and were given 4 to 6 weeks to prepare for deportation. They all
were deported by year's end. The Government ascribes some harassment of
private worship services to individuals and organizations acting on their own
authority and in contradiction of government policy. Representatives of many
Christian denominations present in the country report that the Government is
not interfering with their private worship services.
Proselytizing is illegal. There were two cases during the
year in which the police detained foreign Christian activists. In May the
Mutawaa'in raided the apartment of a Filipino Christian pastor and detained
him for proselytizing. He was released and deported in July. Another Filipino
was arrested for proselytizing in July and deported in August.
Persons wearing religious symbols of any kind in public
risk confrontation with the Mutawaa'in. This general prohibition against
religious symbols also applies to Muslims. A Christian wearing a crucifix or a
Muslim wearing a Koranic necklace in public would be admonished.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel,
Emigration, and Repatriation
The Government restricts the travel of Saudi women, who
must obtain written permission from their closest male relative before the
authorities allow them to board domestic public transportation or to travel
abroad (see Section 5). In November the Ministry of Interior announced that
preparations are underway to issue identity cards to women, which presumably
will allow them to establish independent legal identities from men, a
prerequisite to securing greater rights in many areas, including travel;
however, no action was taken on the matter by year's end. Males may travel
anywhere within the country or abroad.
Foreigners typically are allowed to reside or work in Saudi
Arabia only under the sponsorship of a Saudi national or business. The
Government requires foreign residents to carry identification cards. It does
not permit foreigners to travel outside the city of their employment or change
their workplace without their sponsor's permission. Foreign residents who
travel within the country may be asked by the authorities to show that they
possess letters of permission from their employer or sponsor.
Sponsors generally retain possession of foreign workers'
passports. Foreign workers must obtain permission from their sponsors to
travel abroad. If sponsors are involved in a commercial or labor dispute with
foreign employees, they may ask the authorities to prohibit the employees from
departing the country until the dispute is resolved. Some sponsors use this as
a pressure tactic to resolve disputes in their favor or to have foreign
employees deported. There were numerous reports of the Government prohibiting
foreign employees involved in labor disputes from departing the country until
the dispute was resolved (see Section 5).
The Government seizes the passports of all potential
suspects and witnesses in criminal cases and suspends the issuance of exit
visas to them until the case is tried or otherwise concluded. As a result,
some foreign nationals are forced to remain in the country for lengthy periods
against their will. The authorities sometimes confiscate the passports of
suspected oppositionists and their families. The Government actively
discourages Shi'a travel to Iran to visit pilgrimage sites. The Government
still punishes Shi'a who travel to Iran without permission from the Ministry
of the Interior, or those suspected of such travel, by confiscating passports
for up to 2 years (see Section 5).
Citizens may emigrate, but the law prohibits dual
citizenship. Apart from marriage to a Saudi national, there are no provisions
for foreign residents to acquire citizenship. However, foreigners are granted
citizenship in rare cases, generally through the advocacy of an influential
patron.
The 1992 Basic Law provides that "the state will grant
political asylum if the public interest mitigates" in favor of it. The
language does not specify clear rules for adjudicating asylum cases. In
general, the authorities regard refugees and displaced persons like other
foreign workers: they must have sponsors for employment or risk expulsion. Of
the 33,000 Iraqi civilians and former prisoners of war allowed refuge in Saudi
Arabia at the end of the Gulf War, none has been granted permanent asylum in
the country; however, the Government has underwritten the entire cost of
providing safe haven to the Iraqi refugees, and continues to provide excellent
logistical and administrative support to the UNHCR and other resettlement
agencies.
At year's end, approximately 27,000 of the original 33,000
Iraqi refugees had been resettled in other countries or voluntarily
repatriated to Iraq. Most of the approximately 6,000 remaining refugees are
restricted to the Rafha refugee camp. The UNHCR has monitored over 3,000
persons voluntarily returning to Iraq from Rafha since December 1991 and found
no evidence of forcible repatriation (see Section 1.c.).
The Government has allowed some foreigners to remain
temporarily in the country in cases where their safety would be jeopardized if
they were deported to their home countries.
Section 3. Respect for Political Rights: The Right of
Citizens to Change Their Government
Citizens do not have the right to change their government.
There are no formal democratic institutions, and only a few citizens have a
voice in the choice of leaders or in changing the political system. The King
rules on civil and religious matters within certain limitations established by
religious law, tradition, and the need to maintain consensus among the ruling
family and religious leaders.
The King is also the Prime Minister, and the Crown Prince
serves as Deputy Prime Minister. The King appoints all other ministers, who in
turn appoint subordinate officials with cabinet concurrence. In 1992 the King
appointed 60 members to a Consultative Council, or Majlis Ash-Shura. This
strictly advisory body began to hold sessions in 1993. In 1997 the King
expanded the council to 90 members. There is one Shi'a on the Council. The
Council engages in debates that, while closed to the view of the general
public, provide advice and views occasionally contrary to the Government's
proposed policy or recommended course of action. The Government usually
incorporates the Majlis' advice into its final policy announcements or tries
to convince the council why the Government's policy is correct.
The Council of Senior Islamic Scholars is another advisory
body to the King and the Cabinet. It reviews the Government's public policies
for compliance with Shari'a. The Government views the Council as an important
source of religious legitimacy and takes the Council's opinions into account
when promulgating legislation.
Communication between citizens and the Government usually
is expressed through client-patron relationships and by affinity groups such
as tribes, families, and professional hierarchies. In theory, any male citizen
or foreign national may express an opinion or air a grievance at a majlis, an
open-door meeting held by the King, a prince, or an important national or
local official. However, as governmental functions have become more complex,
time-consuming, and centralized, public access to senior officials has become
more restricted. Since the assassination of King Faisal in 1975, Saudi kings
have reduced the frequency of their personal contacts with the public.
Ministers and district governors more readily grant audiences at a majlis.
Typical topics raised in a majlis are complaints about
bureaucratic delay or insensitivity, requests for personal redress or
assistance, and criticism of particular acts of government affecting family
welfare. Broader "political" concerns--social, economic, or foreign
policy--rarely are raised. Complaints about royal abuses of power are not
entertained. In general, journalists, academics, and businessmen believe that
institutionalized avenues of domestic criticism of the regime are closed.
Feedback is filtered through private personal channels and has affected
various policy issues, including the Middle East peace process, unemployment
of young Saudi men, and the construction of new infrastructure.
The Committee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights (CDLR),
an opposition group, was established in 1993. The Government acted almost
immediately to repress it. In 1994 one of its founding members, Mohammed Al-Masari,
fled to the United Kingdom, where he sought political asylum and established
an overseas branch of the CDLR. In 1996 internal divisions within the CDLR led
to the creation of the rival Islamic Reform Movement (IRM), headed by Sa'ad
Al-Faqih. Al-Masari expressed the CDLR's "understanding" of two
fatal terrorist bombings of U.S. military facilities in 1995 and 1996 and
sympathy for the perpetrators. The IRM implicitly condoned the two terrorist
attacks as well, arguing that they were a natural outgrowth of a political
system that does not tolerate peaceful dissent. Both groups continue to
criticize the Government, using computers and facsimile transmissions to send
newsletters back to Saudi Arabia.
Women play no formal role in government and politics and
are actively discouraged from doing so. Participation by women in a majlis is
restricted, although some women seek redress through female members of the
royal family.
One of the 90 members of the Majlis Ash-Shura is Shi'a.
Section 4. Governmental Attitude Regarding International
and Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
There are no publicly active human rights groups, and the
Government has made it clear that none critical of government policies would
be permitted. Both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch reported that
they received no responses to their requests for information or access to the
country.
The Government does not permit visits by international
human rights groups or independent monitors. The Government disagrees with
internationally accepted definitions of human rights and views its
interpretation of Islamic law as the only necessary guide to protect human
rights. The Government generally ignores, or condemns as attacks on Islam,
citations of Saudi human rights abuses by international monitors or foreign
governments. However, in April 1998, the Government provided a 51-page
treatise on the functioning of its legal system to the U.N. Commission on
Human Rights and pledged cooperation with U.N. human rights mechanisms. Early
in the year, the Government set up a human rights office within the
International Office Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to attempt
to monitor conditions within the country.
Section 5. Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion,
Disability, Language, or Social Status
There is legal and systemic discrimination based on sex and
religion. The law forbids discrimination based on race, but not nationality.
The Government and private organizations cooperate in providing services for
the disabled. The Shi'a religious minority suffers social, legal, and
sectarian discrimination.
Women
The Government does not keep statistics on spousal abuse or
other forms of violence against women. However, based on the information
available regarding physical spousal abuse and violence against women, such
violence and abuse appear to be common problems. Hospital workers report that
many women are admitted for treatment of injuries that apparently result from
spousal violence. Some foreign women have suffered physical abuse from their
Saudi husbands. A Saudi man can prevent his wife and any child or unmarried
adult daughter from obtaining an exit visa to depart Saudi Arabia (see Section
2.d.). There were reports during the year that young Saudi men intimidated and
sexually harassed women in public in Jeddah.
Foreign embassies continued to receive many reports that
employers abuse foreign women working as domestic servants. Some embassies of
countries with large domestic servant populations maintain safehouses to which
their citizens may flee to escape work situations that include forced
confinement, withholding of food, beating and other physical abuse, and rape.
Often the reported abuse is at the hands of female Saudis. In general, the
Government considers such cases family matters and does not intervene unless
charges of abuse are brought to its attention. It is almost impossible for
foreign women to obtain redress in the courts due to the courts' strict
evidentiary rules and the women's own fears of reprisals. Few employers have
been punished for such abuses. There are no private support groups or
religious associations to assist such women.
By religious law and social custom, women have the right to
own property and are entitled to financial support from their husbands or male
relatives. However, women have few political or social rights and are not
treated as equal members of society. There are no active women's rights
groups. Women, including foreigners, legally may not drive motor vehicles and
are restricted in their use of public facilities when men are present. Women
must enter city buses by separate rear entrances and sit in specially
designated sections. Women risk arrest by the Mutawaa'in for riding in a
vehicle driven by a male who is not an employee or a close male relative.
Women are not admitted to a hospital for medical treatment without the consent
of a male relative. By law and custom, women may not undertake domestic or
foreign travel alone (see Section 2.d.). However, in November the Ministry of
Interior announced that preparations are underway to issue identity cards to
women. Issuance of the cards presumably will allow women to establish
independent legal identities from men, a prerequisite to securing greater
rights in many areas, including travel, financial transactions, business
registrations, publishing, employment, and, eventually, driving. However, no
action on the matter had been taken by year's end.
In public a woman is expected to wear an abaya, a black
garment that covers the entire body, and also to cover her head and face. The
Mutawaa'in generally expect women from Arab countries, Asia, and Africa to
comply more fully with Saudi customs of dress than they do Western women;
nonetheless, in recent years they have instructed Western women to wear the
abaya and cover their hair. During the year, Mutawaa'in continued to admonish
and harass women to wear their abayas and cover their hair.
Some government officials and ministries still bar
accredited female diplomats in Saudi Arabia from official meetings and
diplomatic functions.
Women also are subject to discrimination under Shari'a as
interpreted in Saudi Arabia, which stipulates that daughters receive half the
inheritance awarded to their brothers. In a Shari'a court, the testimony of
one man equals that of two women (see Section 1.e.). Although Islamic law
permits polygyny, with up to four wives, it is becoming less common due to
demographic and economic changes. Islamic law enjoins a man to treat each wife
equally. In practice such equality is left to the discretion of the husband.
Some women participate in Al-Mesyar (or "short daytime visit")
marriages, where the women relinquish their legal rights to financial support
and nighttime cohabitation. Additionally, the husband is not required to
inform his other wives of the marriage, and any children resulting from such a
marriage have no inheritance rights. The Government places greater
restrictions on women than on men regarding marriage to non-Saudis and
non-Muslims (see Section 1.f.). While Shari'a provides women with a basis to
own and dispose of property independently, women often are constrained from
asserting such rights because of various legal and societal barriers,
especially regarding employment and freedom of movement.
Women must demonstrate legally specified grounds for
divorce, but men may divorce without giving cause. In doing so, men are
required to pay immediately an amount of money agreed upon at the time of the
marriage, which serves as a one-time alimony payment. Women who demonstrate
legal grounds for divorce still are entitled to this alimony. If divorced or
widowed, a Muslim woman normally may keep her children until they attain a
specified age: 7 years for boys, 9 years for girls. Children over these ages
are awarded to the divorced husband or the deceased husband's family. Numerous
divorced foreign women continued to be prevented by their former husbands from
visiting their children after divorce.
Women have access to free but segregated education through
the university level. They constitute over 58 percent of all university
students but are excluded from studying such subjects as engineering,
journalism, and architecture. Men may study overseas; women may do so only if
accompanied by a spouse or an immediate male relative.
Women make up approximately 5 percent of the formal work
force and own about 4 percent of the businesses, although they must deputize a
male relative to represent the business. Most employment opportunities for
women are in education and health care, with lesser opportunity in business,
philanthropy, banking, retail sales, and the media. Many foreign women work as
domestic servants and nurses. In 1997 the Government authorized women to work
in a limited capacity in the hotel industry. Women who wish to enter
nontraditional fields are subject to discrimination. Women may not accept jobs
in rural areas if they are required to live apart from their families. Most
workplaces where women are present are segregated by sex. Contact with male
supervisors or clients is allowed by telephone or facsimile machine. In 1995
the Ministry of Commerce announced that women would no longer be issued
business licenses for work in fields that might require them to supervise
foreign workers, interact with male clients, or deal on a regular basis with
government officials. However, in hospital settings and in the oil industry,
women and men work together, and in some instances, women supervise male
employees.
Children
The Government provides all children with free education
and medical care. Children are not subject to the strict social segregation
faced by women, although they are segregated by sex in schools starting at the
age of 7. In more general social situations, boys are segregated at the age of
12 and girls at the onset of puberty.
It is difficult to gauge the prevalence of child abuse,
since the Government currently keeps no national statistics on such cases. One
major hospital has begun a program to detect, report, and prevent child abuse.
In general, Saudi culture greatly prizes children and initial studies show
that severe abuse and neglect of children appears to be rare.
Trafficking in children for forced begging persists (see
Sections 6.c. and 6.f.).
People With Disabilities
The provision of government social services increasingly
has brought the disabled into the public mainstream. The media carry features
lauding the accomplishments of disabled persons and sharply criticizing
parents who neglect disabled children. The Government and private charitable
organizations cooperate in education, employment, and other services for the
disabled. The law provides hiring quotas for the disabled. There is no
legislation that mandates public accessibility; however, newer commercial
buildings often include such access.
Foreign criminal rings reportedly bought and imported
disabled children for the purpose of forced begging (see Sections 6.c. and
6.f.).
Religious Minorities
Shi'a citizens are discriminated against in government and
employment, especially in national security jobs. Several years ago the
Government subjected Shi'a to employment restrictions in the oil industry and
has not relaxed them. Since the 1979 Iranian revolution, some Shi'a who are
suspected of subversion have been subjected periodically to surveillance and
limitations on travel abroad. Since beginning the investigation of the 1996
bombing of a U.S. military installation, authorities have detained,
interrogated, and confiscated the passports of a number of Shi'a Muslims,
including Shi'a returning to Saudi Arabia following travel to Iran (see
Sections 1.d. and 2.d.).
In November 1998, several Mutawaa'in attacked and killed an
elderly Shi'a prayer leader in Hofuf for repeating the call to prayer twice (a
traditional Shi'a practice). The Government reportedly is investigating the
incident; however, the Government does not make public the results of
investigations involving its personnel (see Sections 1.a. and 2.c.).
Under Saudi law, children of Saudi fathers are considered
Muslim, regardless of the country or the religious tradition in which they may
have been raised. In some cases, children raised in other countries and in
other religious traditions later taken by their Saudi fathers to Saudi Arabia
were reportedly coerced to conform to Islamic norms and practices.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
Although racial discrimination is illegal, there is
substantial societal prejudice based on ethnic or national origin. Foreign
workers from Africa and Asia are subject to various forms of formal and
informal discrimination and have the most difficulty in obtaining justice for
their grievances. For example, pay scales for identical or similar labor or
professional services are set by nationality such that two similarly qualified
and experienced foreign nationals performing the same employment duties
receive varied compensation based on their nationalities (see Section 6.b.).
Section 6. Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
Government decrees prohibit the establishment of labor
unions and any strike activity.
In 1995 Saudi Arabia was suspended from the U.S. Overseas
Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) insurance programs because of the
Government's lack of compliance with internationally recognized worker rights
standards.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
Collective bargaining is forbidden. Foreign workers
comprise about two-thirds of the work force. There is no minimum wage; wages
are set by employers and vary according to the type of work performed and the
nationality of the worker (see Section 5).
There are no export processing zones.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The Government prohibits forced or compulsory labor
pursuant to a 1962 royal decree that abolished slavery. Ratification of the
International Labor Organization (ILO) Conventions 29 and 105, which prohibit
forced labor, gives them the force of law. However, employers have significant
control over the movements of foreign employees, which gives rise to
situations that sometimes involve forced labor, especially in remote areas
where workers are unable to leave their place of work.
Some sponsors prevented foreign workers from obtaining exit
visas to pressure them to sign a new work contract or to drop claims against
their employers for unpaid salary (see section 2.d.). In another pressure
tactic, some sponsors refused to provide foreign workers with a "letter
of no objection" that would allow them to be employed by another sponsor.
The labor laws do not protect domestic servants. There were
credible reports that female domestic servants sometimes were forced to work
12 to 16 hours per day, 7 days per week. There were numerous confirmed reports
of runaway maids (see Section 5). The authorities often returned runaway maids
to their employers against the maids' wishes.
There have been many reports of workers whose employers
refused to pay several months, or even years, of accumulated salary or other
promised benefits. Nondomestic workers with such grievances have the right to
complain before the labor courts, but few do so because of fear of
deportation. The labor system is conducive to the exploitation of foreign
workers because enforcement of work contracts is difficult and generally
favors employers. Labor courts, while generally fair, may take many months to
reach a final appellate ruling, during which time the employer may prevent the
foreign laborer from leaving the country. An employer also may delay a case
until a worker's funds are exhausted and the worker is forced to return to his
home country.
The law does not specifically prohibit forced or bonded
labor by children. Nonetheless, with the rare exception of criminal begging
rings, and the possible exceptions of family businesses, forced or bonded
child labor does not occur (see Section 6.d.). In 1997 the Government actively
sought to eradicate forced child begging. Criminal rings consisting almost
exclusively of foreigners bought and imported South Asian children for the
purpose of forced begging (see Section 6.f.).
v d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for
Employment
The minimum age for employment is 13 years of age, which
may be waived by the Ministry of Labor with the consent of the juvenile's
guardian. There is no minimum age for workers employed in family oriented
businesses or in other areas that are construed as extensions of the
household, such as farmers, herdsmen, and domestic servants. The law does not
prohibit specifically forced or bonded labor by children, but it is not a
problem, with the rare exception of forced child begging rings, and possibly
family businesses (see Section 6.c.).
Children under the age of 18 and women may not be employed
in hazardous or harmful industries, such as mining or industries employing
power-operated machinery. While there is no formal government entity
responsible for enforcing the minimum age for employment of children, the
Ministry of Justice has jurisdiction and has acted as plaintiff in the few
cases that have arisen against alleged violators. However, in general children
play a minimal role in the work force.
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
There is no legal minimum wage. Labor regulations establish
a 48-hour workweek at regular pay and allow employers to require up to 12
additional hours of overtime at time-and-a-half pay. Labor law provides for a
24-hour rest period, normally on Fridays, although the employer may grant it
on another day. The average wage generally provides a decent standard of
living for a worker and family.
The ILO has stated that the Government has not formulated
legislation implementing the ILO Convention on Equal Pay and that regulations
that segregate work places by sex, or limit vocational programs for women,
violate ILO Convention 111.
Some foreign nationals who have been recruited abroad have
complained that after their arrival in Saudi Arabia they were presented with
work contracts that specified lower wages and fewer benefits than originally
promised. Other foreign workers reportedly have signed contracts in their home
countries and later were pressured to sign less favorable contracts upon
arrival. Some employees report that at the end of their contract service,
their employers refuse to grant permission to allow them to return home.
Foreign employees involved in disputes with their employers may find their
freedom of movement restricted (see Section 2.d.). Some female domestic
servants often were subjected to abuse (see Sections 5 and 6.c.).
Saudiization is the Government's attempt to decrease the
number of foreigners working in certain occupations and to replace them with
Saudi workers. To accomplish this goal, the Government has taken several
long-term steps, most notably limiting employment in certain fields to
citizens, prohibiting renewal of existing contracts, and requiring that 5
percent of the work force in private sector companies be filled by citizen
workers. The Government also requires firms to increase the proportion of
citizen workers by 5 per cent each year. There is a limited number of persons,
both influential and otherwise, who attempted to circumvent the requirements
of the law. For example, employers have altered job descriptions or hired
foreigners for nominally low-level positions but in fact had them fill
positions reserved for citizens. Influential persons effectively may
circumvent the law because the Ministry of Labor is simply unwilling to
confront them.
The ongoing campaign to remove illegal immigrants from the
country has done little to Saudiize the economy because illegal immigrants
largely work in low-income positions, which most Saudis consider unsuitable.
However, the campaign did improve overall working conditions for legally
employed immigrants in low-income positions. The Government is carrying out
the campaign by widely publicizing its enforcement of existing laws against
illegal immigrants and Saudis employing or sponsoring illegal immigrants. In
addition to deportation for illegal workers and jail terms and fines for
Saudis hiring illegal workers, the Government announced in 1998 that houses
rented to illegal aliens would be ordered closed. In 1997 the Government
offered an amnesty of several months duration, which allowed illegal
immigrants and their employers or sponsors to avoid the possibility of
prosecution by voluntarily seeking expeditious repatriation. As of September,
as many as 1.1 million persons departed the country under terms of the amnesty
or were deported for violating residence and labor laws in the past 3 years.
During this process, the Government bowed to domestic pressure and granted
grace periods and exemptions to certain categories of illegal immigrants (such
as servants, drivers, and shepherds), thereby allowing many illegal immigrants
to legalize their status without leaving the country. The effect of the
expeditious repatriation of some illegal immigrants and the legalization of
others has been to improve overall working conditions for legally employed
foreigners. Illegal immigrants generally are willing to accept lower salaries
and fewer benefits than legally employed immigrants. Their departure or
legalization reduced the competition for certain jobs and thereby reduced the
incentive for legal immigrants to accept lower wages and fewer benefits as a
means of competing with illegal immigrants. Furthermore, their departure or
legalization removed a large portion of the class of persons most vulnerable
to abuse and exploitation because of their illegal status.
Labor regulations require employers to protect most workers
from job-related hazards and disease. Foreign nationals report frequent
failures to enforce health and safety standards. Farmers, herdsmen, domestic
servants, and workers in family operated businesses are not covered by these
regulations. Workers risk losing employment if they remove themselves from
hazardous work conditions.
f. Trafficking in Persons
The law does not prohibit specifically trafficking in
persons; however, the law prohibits slavery and the smuggling of persons into
the country.
According to reports, criminal rings consisting almost
exclusively of foreigners bought and imported South Asian children, including
disabled children. Ring organizers systematically forced the children to beg
in the streets and then confiscated all money that the children gained. During
the year, the authorities arrested some ring organizers and returned at least
76 children to their own countries.
Early in the year, the Moroccan press reported that a
Moroccan woman who had been recruited to be a domestic servant in Saudi
Arabia, escaped a prostitution ring there and informed police, which led to
the arrest of her Moroccan handlers, an extended family group numbering about
40 persons. This same group of Moroccans had been involved in organizing
similar such activities throughout the Persian Gulf region.
Source: U.S. State Department.
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