Saturday, May 11, 2019

The chilling message of the Saudi executions



A couple of weeks have passed since the dramatic beheadings of 37 Saudi citizensthat shocked the world.
According to Human Rights Watch, at least 33 of those who were executed were from the minority Shia community -- which has suffered a long history of persecution in Saudi Arabia.
With the Kingdom facing mounting criticism over bombing deaths and starvation in the Yemen war,imprisoned and reportedly tortured women activists, and the grisly murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, many wonder why Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud offered critics another human rights issue? But these executions served a clear purpose -- to strike fear in the Saudi Shia population while rallying the royal family's ultra-conservative Wahhabi -- the official creed of the Kingdom -- fundamentalist base. In the end, to be Shia in Saudi Arabia has always been a complicated affair.
Few Americans know that Wahhabism, a branch of Sunni Islam, looks down on Shia Muslims as apostates. Violence against Shia communities is deeply rooted in the Saudi Kingdom's DNA. Like African Americans in the Deep South, the Shia have suffered discrimination and suspicion from the Wahhabi ruling elite since the founding of the country in 1932.
Those who were executed in April included protestorswho were arrested and convicted of terror-related crimes during the Arab Spring demonstrations in 2011 and 2012. However, the human rights group Amnesty International said the legal proceedings "violated international fair trial standards which relied on confessions extracted through torture."
According to trial documents obtained by CNN, some of the men repeatedly told the court that their confessions were false and obtained through torture.
When Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman rose to power in 2017, there was some hope that the Salman dynasty would usher in reforms. However, anti-Shia rhetoric persisted. For example, the hardline cleric Saleh al-Fawzan, a member of the state-sponsored Council of Senior Scholars, claimed in 2017, that the Shia are infidels and that anyone who disagrees is also an infidel.
And al-Fawzan has also said that political dissidents who disagree with the Kingdom rulers should be put to death.
The disappearance and murder of Khashoggi, a critic of the Saudi government, after he entered the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, fell in line with the intentions of al-Fawzan's rhetoric.
The CIA later concluded that King Salman's son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (commonly known by his initials MBS), personally ordered his killing.
The Saudi government has repeatedly denied the allegations, although the US Senate voted to condemn the young prince for Khashoggi's grisly fate.
While Khashoggi's death sparked international outrage, the Trump administration steered clear of assigning blame, and many businesses have quietly continued their plans for expansion there.
Amid inflammatory rhetoric against Iran -- a country dominated by Shia -- coming from the White House, King Salman seemed encouraged to send a clear message of terror to his restive Shia citizens.
In doing so, the Saudi government seems to be ignoring the increased pressures it has recently faced on numerous fronts. Congress defied President Donald Trump in voting to suspend military aid for the kingdom's war in Yemen. The state-owned oil company Aramco's called off its initial public offering, while investors have reportedly pulled funding for MBS' ambitious economic plan called Vision 2030.
To counter these setbacks, King Salman has drawn inspiration from the earliest days of the Saud dynasty to secure his most loyal followers -- the archconservative Wahhabi faithful. Historical persecution of the Shias has been the life-blood of the Wahhabi sect that was borne in central Arabia more than 250 years ago. For centuries, the Shia who lived along the Persian Gulf suffered violence from Wahhabi believers, who labeled them infidels.
During my childhood in Dhahran, when my father worked at Saudi Aramco from 1952-1960, I witnessed persecution of Shia who call the oil-rich eastern province, known as Al-Ahsa, their home. Our friends lived in oasis towns where Shia communities have dwelled for centuries. The sad fact is that the staggering oil wealth that poured into Riyadh was siphoned away from the Eastern Province.
Little was spent in the Shia communities, yet they have represented the majority of Saudi manpower in Aramco -- now likely the world's most profitable company.
Instead of benefiting from the profits of vast oil fields that lay under historically Shia lands, they have been treated as second-class citizens since Ibn Saud, who would eventually go on to found Saudi Arabia, and his family conquered their homeland in 1913.
Even today, some Shia friends of mine call it "religious apartheid."
When I returned as a management consultant to Saudi Arabia in the 1980's, clerics had condemned mixing between Sunnis and Shia as well as intermarriage.
In numerous religious rulings, the late grand mufti, Abdulaziz Bin Baz, condemned the Shia community. Bin Baz's religious rulings are still available in the kingdom's official database and are often cited in Saudi court rulings, which are based on Islamic law.
More recently, a member of the Council of Senior Scholars said that Shia Muslims were "not our brothers ... rather they are the brothers of Satan...", according to Human Rights Watch.
Because of the historic conflict with the Shia community, the execution orders handed down by Saudi magistrates in April were expected.
But larger questions remain. Will MBS truly bring change and a more moderate Islam? Or do these April beheadings signal continued anti-Shia sentiment?
Is the Crown Prince trying to spark a conflict with Iran -- mother country of the Shia? And will this plunge America and the region into yet another unconstitutional war? Given the Saudi history of aiding and abetting extremists while claiming to be their enemy, should America be wary of being lured into another conflict? We should be very wary.
Recently, US National Security Adviser John Bolton announced that an aircraft carrier strike group with a bomber task force had been deployed to the Persian Gulf to deter Iran.
    The royal Saud family may be gambling that America will come to its rescue and plunge the US into, yet again, another war, in what would be another trillion dollar debacle. The truth is that America is extremely efficient at starting wars but dramatically incompetent at ending them.
    Any aggression against Iran risks rupturing ties with Europe and in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, while provoking conflict with both Russia and China. If shooting erupts, the narrow Strait of Hormuz -- the gateway in and out of the Persian Gulf -- will surely be closed to oil tankers until the guns are silent. Lights of the industrial world will dim. It will be a time for lighting candles, unless cooler heads prevail. Perhaps this is a moment to stand up to the Saudi royals, (after the unpleasant experiences with al-Qaeda and ISIS -- both Wahhabi inspired) and not be lured in yet again to another conflagration without end.

    CIA warns Khashoggi associates about threats from Saudi Arabia



    Foreign security services warn pro-democracy advocates of potential retaliation by Saudi agents.
    The CIA and foreign security services have warned friends and colleagues of slain Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi that their continuation of pro-democracy work has made them targets of potential retaliation from Saudi Arabia.
    Democracy advocates Iyad el-Baghdadi in Oslo, Norway, Omar Abdulaziz of Montreal, Canada, and a person in the United States who asked not to be named were working closely with Khashoggi on politically sensitive media and human rightsprojects at the time of his killing, US publication TIME reported on Thursday.
    The three advocates have received security briefings in recent weeks, warning them of a possible threat from Saudi Arabia, the report said.
    El-Baghdadi - a Palestinian human rights campaigner and writer who won prominence during the 2011 Arab uprisings and has written critically of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) - said Norwegian security services took him to a secure location on April 25 and told him of the possible threat.
    "Once I was there and settled down, they told me that ... they have received a tip from a partner intelligence agency indicating that I've been the target of a threat," he told Reuters News Agency.

    'Crosshairs on my back'

    El-Baghdadi said he spent three hours at the April meeting discussing with members of Norway's PST security service why he might be at risk.
    "They did not describe the nature of the threat except to say that I had crosshairs on my back, that I shouldn't travel and that I should warn my family immediately," el-Baghdadi told TIME.
    "But my entire conversation with the PST from beginning to end was about the Saudis."
    Apologies to virtually everyone who's been trying to get in touch, and thanks for your support. I'd like to make a couple important corrections:
    1. It is not clear at this time what the nature of the threat was, and there's no indication that it had translated into a specific plot. As I said earlier: They seem to have me in their cross-hairs but it's not clear what they want to do.
    76 people are talking about this
    The Saudi embassy in Oslo was not immediately available for comment. Saudi Arabia's government communications office did not respond to a request for comment.
    El-Baghdadi said the Norwegian authorities did not name the partner agency, but from the context of the conversation, he inferred they were referring to the US CIA.
    The Norwegian justice ministry, which is in charge of the security services, the Norwegian security police, and the foreign ministry all declined to comment.
    The CIA also declined to comment when contacted by Reuters.
    Friends and associates of Saudi dissident Abdulaziz, who has permanent resident status in Canada, confirmed to TIME that Canadian security officials visited him at his Montreal home recently and provided a similar threat briefing, prompting him to go into hiding for several days.
    Saudi Arabia has come under increasing global scrutiny over its human rights record since the grisly murder of Khashoggi last year inside the kingdom's Istanbul consulate and the detention of about a dozen women's rights activists.
    A bipartisan chorus of US legislators has called on the White House to harden its stance towards Saudi Arabia after Khashoggi, a critic of Crown Prince Mohammed, was killed by Saudi agents in a move widely seen as an attempt to stifle dissent.
    A CIA assessment blamed MBS for ordering the killing, which Saudi officials deny. Khashoggi's body has never been found.

    Fresh Saudi airstrikes claim lives of seven Yemenis

    At least seven people, including women and children, have been killed after Saudi-led warplanes carried out airstrikes against an area in Yemen’s southwestern province of Dhale.
    Yemeni Ministry of Public Health and Population said 17 others sustained injuries when Saudi fighter jets conducted aerial assaults against Qatabah district on Saturday.
    Yemen’s al-Masirah television network said six children and a woman were among the killed, while the injured included 11 children, five women and an elderly man.
    Saudi Arabia and a number of its regional allies launched a devastating campaign against Yemen in March 2015, with the goal of bringing the government of former president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi back to power and crushing the Houthi Ansarullah movement.
    According to a December 2018 report by the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED), a nonprofit conflict-research organization, the Saudi-led war has claimed the lives of over 60,000 Yemenis since January 2016.
    France, the United States, Britain and some other Western countries have faced criticisms over arms sales to the Saudi regime and its allies, whose aggression against Yemen has affected 28 million people and caused what the United Nations calls “one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world."
    In the latest protests against the arms exports, French human rights protesters held demonstrations on Thursday in a bid to block the loading of weapons onto a Saudi vessel that was due to dock in northern France later in the day.
    On Friday, the spokesman for Yemen’s Houthi Ansarullah movement fiercely slammed the French government for supplying Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) with weapons that have been used in their war on Yemen.
    Describing Paris’ move as “a clear hypocrisy to evade crimes”, Mohammed Abdul-Salam called on France and other countries to stop selling weapons to Saudi Arabia and the UAE, which have been involved in an atrocious military aggression against Yemen for more than four years.
    Meanwhile, the Saudi cargo ship Bahri-Yanbu, which reports said had not been able to load weapons due to protests, has reportedly picked up a shipment of French arms from Le Havre port in the Normandy region of northwestern France and will be headed to the Saudi port city of Jeddah.
    Last weekend, the ship had been loaded with weapons in the Belgian port city of Antwerp, where it berthed from Friday evening to Sunday evening last week, the Brussels Times reported.
    The protests came weeks after investigative website Disclose published leaked documents, showing Saudi Arabia was using French weapons, including tanks and laser-guided missile systems, against civilians in Yemen's war.
    Faced with growing criticism, French President Emmanuel Macron admitted that the weapons were indeed being used in the war but only within Saudi Arabia's border.
    "I would like to say here that what we reiterated was the guarantee for them (the arms) not be used against civilian populations," he said.
    Paris is a signatory of the UN Arms Trade Treaty, which oversees the international trade of conventional weapons.

    China not to compromise on matters of principle, economy resilient: vice premier



    Vice Premier Liu He said Chinese and US trade negotiators have agreed to meet again in Beijing in the future, and called on both sides to remain calm and not escalate trade tensions, after the 11th bilateral trade negotiations concluded in Washington on Friday local time.

    The Chinese economy remains resilient over the medium and long term and China is not afraid, said Liu.

    The 11th round of trade talks between China and the US wrapped up in Washington in the early morning on Saturday Beijing time. 

    "It is normal that we have small twists and turns during talks. It's inevitable," Liu said, telling reporters after the negotiation that both sides have clarified their stands and discussed the content of their next negotiation. 

    Liu also said China will not compromise when it comes to "matters of principles." Neither China nor the Chinese people are afraid, he added.

    Liu also confirmed that China will be forced to take countermeasures after the US on Friday increased an existing 10 percent tariff on $200 billion in Chinese goods and products to 25 percent.  

    Adding tariffs will harm the economies of both countries and the world, and does not serve any good in solving the bilateral economic and trade issues, said Liu. 

    Liu said he is prudently optimistic about the future, saying the Chinese economy has great prospects over the long term. 

    China should focus on its own thing, said Liu, pointing out that last year the Chinese economy reached the bottom of an economic cycle and is now on the rise. 

    The Chinese market is still vast with huge consumption and investment demands, which is obvious to the world, noted Liu. With the supply-side reform, the competitiveness of companies has been elevated, he said. 

    There is still sufficient room for fiscal and monetary policies and enough tools in the policy toolkit As long as China and the Chinese people maintain confidence, China's economy will maintain a smooth and healthy development despite some pressures, said the vice premier. 

    The Chinese stock market on Friday dropped sharply but rebounded quickly to close high. The purchasing manager's index remains above the 50 percent threshold in April.

    Chinese negotiators hope their US counterparts understand that China needs to be treated fairly and with dignity in order to reach a deal, Liu said.

    Beijing vows retaliation on US trade


    Ministry expresses 'deep regrets' in wake of added tariffs on Chinese goods
    The Ministry of Commerce expressed "deep regrets" on Friday at the United States' move to impose additional tariffs on Chinese imports and vowed to take necessary countermeasures.
    The comments came shortly after the US increased the rate of additional duties on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports from 10 percent to 25 percent, a move that economists said amounts to "typical trade bullying" that will backfire to hurt its own interests.
    The commerce ministry said in a statement that the 11th round of China-US high-level economic and trade consultations are underway, and China hopes the two sides can work together to resolve existing issues cooperatively.
    Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said at a daily news briefing that a healthy and stable Sino-US relationship serves the interests of both countries and is expected by the international community.
    The world's two largest economies have been embroiled in tit-for-tat tariff exchanges since July over US demands that China change certain trade policies. To hash out differences, the countries have held high-level talks, the latest round in Washington.
    Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He, who leads the Chinese delegation, said on Thursday that he came to Washington with sincerity to engage in "rational and candid" exchanges with the US to resolve some of their disparities.
    Liu said the hike in tariffs is harmful to China, to the US and to the whole world.
    "The Chinese side believes raising tariffs is not a solution to the problems," he told the media upon his arrival in Washington on Thursday.
    Liu said the fact that he came this time, despite the pressure, shows the sincerity of the Chinese side.
    Early on Friday in Washington, the Chinese delegation said China hopes the two countries can meet halfway, and that they will make joint efforts to resolve existing problems through cooperation and consultation, Xinhua News Agency reported.
    Experts from both sides voiced strong opposition to the US tariff move, warning of collateral damage that will ripple around the globe.
    The latest tariff move by the US derailed the monthslong China-US trade consultations, and the US should take responsibility for that, said Wang Xiaosong, a professor at Renmin University of China's School of Economics.
    The two countries still have some leeway in advancing the talks, though the current tension has become severe, Wang said.
    Wang said he hopes China and the US will break the deadlock and come to a mutually beneficial resolution as soon as possible.
    "US President Donald Trump used to say that if China-US negotiations break down, a 25 percent additional tariff will be imposed on Chinese imports. But why did Washington raise the tariff while the 11th round of negotiations is underway? An explanation is needed," said Zhang Yansheng, a senior researcher at the China Center for International Economic Exchanges.
    "The sudden US move is typical trade bullying," Zhang said. He urged enhanced efforts across the globe to oppose protectionism to ensure global economic stability.
    Jonathan Gold, vice-president for supply chain and customs policy at the National Retail Federation, said tariff hikes will mean higher costs for US businesses and consumers and lost jobs for many US workers.
    The federation, the world's largest retail trade association, urged the US administration to stay focused on a trade agreement and expressed hope that the negotiations will get back on track.
    "It would be unfortunate to undermine the progress that has been made with more tit-for-tat tariffs that only punish Americans," Gold said in a statement.

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    'Tightening The Noose': Pakistani Journalists Turn To Social Networks As Mainstream Media Gagged


    By Frud Bezhan
    Pakistani television host Murtaza Solangi's current-affairs show was on-air, broadcasting a taped interview with an opposition figure about a military coup that took place a decade earlier, when the program was abruptly cut off.

    The veteran journalist with independent Capital TV exchanged heated words with the managing director and was told to quit immediately. Solangi, who resigned the next day, suspected that the channel had been pressured to halt the broadcast.

    "That is the level of censorship in Pakistan," Solangi recalled of that day in October. "In the mainstream media, the military establishment doesn’t allow critical voices."

    Solangi's incident came amid signs that Pakistan's free press was coming under unprecedented pressure from the military -- an institution that has an oversize role in domestic and foreign affairs in the South Asian country.

    In the past two years, dozens of prominent reporters have been fired or have left after being threatened; the nation's most popular TV channel has been forced off the air; and leading columnists have complained that stories that are critical of the army and intelligence agencies are being rejected by media outlets.

    With the free press gagged, many journalists in Pakistan have turned to social media to get the word out. But even those platforms are under pressure from Pakistani authorities.

    'No Other Option'

    "Journalists with critical voices have no other option but to turn to social media," says Solangi, a former director at state-run Radio Pakistan who also worked as a journalist at Voice of America. "The authorities have tightened the noose around the media."
    Pakistani television host Murtaza Solangi: "Journalists with critical voices have no other option but to turn to social media."
    Pakistani television host Murtaza Solangi: "Journalists with critical voices have no other option but to turn to social media."
    Since he left his current-affairs show, Solangi has continued his critical reporting on Twitter and YouTube on issues that are seen as off-limits to journalists in the mainstream media: criticism of Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government, believed to be close to the military brass; coverage of the Pashtun Protection Movement (PTM), which has denounced the army's heavy-handed operations in the militancy-hit tribal regions; and reporting on jailed former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who was controversially removed from power and had a history of falling out with the military establishment.

    Solangi is active on Twitter, where he has 245,000 followers, and has started his own YouTube channel in which he provides analysis of national issues.
    Solangi is among dozens of leading Pakistani reporters who have left mainstream media and turned to social media.

    Syed Talat Hussain, a prominent anchor and columnist, was the host of a prime-time current-affairs talk show on Pakistan’s most popular TV station, Geo News. In November, he announced on Twitter that he was leaving. He provided no explanation.
    In April 2018, Hussain said in a tweet that the day Geo was unable to "allow space for balanced journalism" there would be "no reason for me to continue to appear on their platform."

    His tweet came after Geo TV, part of Pakistan's largest commercial media group, Jang, was taken off the air in many parts of the country. The ban only ended a month later after talks between the military and the network's chiefs, who pledged to change the network's coverage.
    Weeks earlier, Army Chief General Qamar Bajwa held an off-the-record briefing with a group of journalists in which he described Geo TV as "subversive" and warned the channel that it would face consequences for crossing "red lines" by challenging the military.

    Since leaving Geo TV, Hussain has launched his own YouTube channel -- Straight Talk With Hussain -- that has garnered more than 41,000 subscribers. He has also increased his engagement on Twitter, where he has more than 3 million followers. ​

    Crackdown On Social Media

    Even as social media has become an important outlet for critical journalism, these platforms are coming under growing pressure from authorities.

    In the past two years, dozens of journalists, activists, and government critics have faced legal action over their online posts.

    In February, the government announced the creation of a new enforcement authority to clamp down on social-media users accused of spreading "hate speech and violence." That came after authorities passed a controversial cybercrimes law in 2016 that granted sweeping powers to the government to block online content they deem illegal. Offenders can face up to 14 years in prison. Critics say the moves are intended to curtail free speech and have led to unfair prosecutions.
    Pakistani journalist Shahzeb Jillani is accused of "cyberterrorism" and making "defamatory remarks against the respected institutions of Pakistan."
    Pakistani journalist Shahzeb Jillani is accused of "cyberterrorism" and making "defamatory remarks against the respected institutions of Pakistan."
    In April, Pakistan's law enforcement agency filed a case against Shahzeb Jillani, an investigative reporter who works for the Urdu-language Dunya News TV channel, who is accused of "cyberterrorism" and making "defamatory remarks against the respected institutions of Pakistan."

    Jillani, who previously worked for the BBC and Deutsche Welle, is known for his critical reporting on Pakistan's army and intelligence services.
    Reporters Without Borders condemned what it called the "trumped-up charges" against Jillani.

    The Paris-based media watchdog said in a statement on April 16 that the case against Jillani has been designed to intimidate and silence Pakistan’s journalists.

    Authorities have accelerated efforts to censor social-media platforms.

    In the first half of 2018, Facebook restricted more content in Pakistan -- more than 2,000 posts -- than in any other country in the world, according to its figures. Facebook said the number was seven times higher than the previous six months.

    Meanwhile, Twitter received requests from Pakistani authorities to remove content from more than 3,000 accounts, compared to under 700 in the second half of 2017, according to its figures.

    Scores of Pakistani journalists and activists have received legal notices from Twitter on behalf of the government recently.

    In January, journalist Mubashir Zaidi said he had received an e-mail from Twitter for a tweet about the unsolved killings of police officer Tahir Dawar and former lawmaker Ali Raza Abidi. Twitter notified him that his tweet was in violation of Pakistani law.
    "We have identified many cases of censorship by social-media giants like Twitter and Facebook who willingly comply with Pakistani authorities’ demands," said Daniel Bastard, the head of Reporters Without Borders' Asia-Pacific desk. "We report these cases to our contact at Facebook and Twitter headquarters in California. After our intervention, sometimes the post is restored, sometimes it is not. We don’t get any explanation. This is one of the reasons why we call for Facebook and Twitter to be more transparent with this.

    "The very fact that Pakistani journalists now have no other choice to move to social media to be able to express their views is a terrible sign of the dire state of free expression in Pakistan now," he added.

    Unprecedented Pressure

    Pakistan ranks 142nd out of 180 countries listed on the World Press Freedom Index 2019, compiled by Reporters Without Borders, dropping three places from 2017.

    The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said in a report released in September that the climate for press freedom in Pakistan was deteriorating as the country's army "quietly, but effectively" restricts reporting through "intimidation" and other means.

    The report said journalists who push back or are overly critical of authorities are attacked, threatened, or arrested. CPJ also said the Pakistani military, intelligence, and military-affiliated political groups were suspected in the killings of 22 reporters over the past decade.