ESOHR and 26 NGO call on countries to continue to pressure Saudi Arabia in the 43rd session of the Human Rights Council

24 February، 2020

The European Saudi Organization for Human Rights participated along with 26 other organizations, in sending a letter to the foreign ministers of 37 countries in the world, during which they called for continuing pressure on the Saudi Arabia to release women human rights defenders and address the main criteria for human rights reform. The letter addressed to the foreign ministers of states in conjunction with the 43rd session of the Human Rights Council indicated that human rights continued to deteriorate in Saudi Arabia, despite the criticisms leveled during previous sessions of the council.

It also affirmed the Saudi government’s lack of adherence to a series of standards that had been raised in the Human Rights Council. The organizations considered that this confirms the importance of continuing to put pressure on the Saudi government until these criteria are met.

In their statement, the organizations considered that the human rights situation underscored the importance of supporting the establishment of a monitoring and reporting mechanism, and urged States to ensure that if these standards were not considered, more serious action by the Council would follow..

Public Letter to Foreign Ministers:

We are writing to urge that your government support joint action at the upcoming United Nations Human Rights Council session, and throughout the year, to hold Saudi Arabia to its international human rights obligations.

We appreciate your commitment to Saudi women’s rights defenders and to the improvement of the human rights situation in Saudi Arabia. Your government’s support to the joint statements delivered by Iceland and Australia at the United Nations Human Rights Council (the Council) in 2019 has contributed to direct impact on the ground. At least seven women human rights defenders have been provisionally released and the Saudi government has taken initial steps towards dismantling the male guardianship system.

While acknowledging these positive steps, made possible through sustained international public scrutiny, which came to buttress the decades-long work and sacrifices of Saudi civil society, our organisations remain gravely concerned at the continuing human rights violations in the Kingdom. The joint statements, delivered by Iceland at the 40th session and by Australia at the 42nd session, identified a series of benchmarks the Saudi government should fulfil to address the grave human rights concerns raised at the Council, and it is important that Council scrutiny be maintained until these benchmarks are met. In particular:

  • During the 40th session, your government called on the Saudi government to release all individuals detained for exercising their fundamental freedoms including ten women’s rights activists. Several of them are still in prison and at least 14 individuals were arrested in April 2019, including family members and supporters of the women’s rights movement. Mass arrests in April and November targeted over 20 Saudi intellectuals and writers. The women’s rights defenders who were provisionally released are still facing charges based solely on their activism.
  • Through the joint statements, your government expressed concern at the persecution, harassment and intimidation of activists, journalists, dissidents and their family members and called for an end to impunity for torture and extrajudicial killings. Our organisations have documented torture, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearances and unfair trials of individuals targeted for exercising their fundamental freedoms. Yet, the Saudi government has yet to take any measures to hold those responsible accountable and provide victims with effective remedy. Family members of activists are still facing travel bans and intimidation.
  • Your government has called on the Saudi government to establish truth and accountability for the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi and to fully cooperate with relevant mandate, The trial was concluded in December 2019. The Special Rapporteur concluded that “those who ordered the executions not only walk free but have barely been touched by the investigation and the trial…at no point did the trial consider the responsibilities of the State”.
  • During the 42nd session, your government called on Saudi Arabia to fully cooperate with the Council, including by accepting visits by relevant Special Procedures. The Saudi government is yet to accept any country visit requests since 2017. Your government also encouraged the Saudi government to ratify the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and appealed to it to end its use of the death penalty. The Saudi government has not yet taken any measures to implement these calls.
  • During the 40th session, your government called on the Saudi government to take meaningful steps to ensure that all members of the public, including human rights defenders and journalists, can freely and fully exercise their rights to freedoms of expression, opinion and association, including online, without fear of reprisals. Yet numerous cases of reprisals were documented in the Secretary-General’s annual report on reprisals, and arrests of dissidents have continued.

Human rights defenders and civil society groups can and should play a vital role in the process of reform which the Kingdom is pursuing. The immediate and unconditional release of the women’s rights activists and human rights defenders would be a litmus test of the Saudi government’s political will to improve the human rights situation on the ground and to engage constructively with the Council.

Following her inquiry into the extrajudicial killing of Khashoggi, the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial executions called on the Saudi government to demonstrate non-repetition by releasing all individuals imprisoned for peacefully expressing their views and to conduct an overhaul reform of the institutions that made his execution possible. The Saudi government does respond to international pressure, but for the impact to continue and not backslide, it must be maintained. We recall that the situation in Saudi Arabia meets the objective criteria which your government has committed to applying in deciding whether a situation merits the Council’s attention. Our organisations urge you to ensure sustained scrutiny by the Council at its 43rd session by jointly reiterating calls on the Saudi government to implement the above-mentioned benchmarks, and by supporting the establishment of a monitoring and reporting mechanism over the situation. We urge you to underline in your statements that should these benchmarks not be met, more formal Council action will follow. Please accept the assurances of our highest consideration,

  • International Service for Human Rights (ISHR)
  • Human Rights Watch
  • Amnesty International
  • ALQST
  • Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR)
  • Equality Now
  • CIVICUS
  • Women’s March Global
  • Access Now
  • Urgent Action Fund
  • International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH)
  • Humanists International
  • Reprieve
  • PEN
  • MENA Rights Group
  • Bahrain Institute for Rights & Democracy (BIRD)
  • Americans for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain
  • European Center for Democracy and Human Rights
  • European Saudi Organization for Human Rights
  • Louder-Lebanon
  • The Lebanese Council to Resist Violence Against Woman
  • Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies
  • Vigilance for Democracy and the Civic State
  • Lawyers’ Rights Watch Canada
  • DefendDefenders (East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Project)
  • Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUM-ASIA)
  • Asian Legal Resource Center (ALRC)
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