Publication date: 27/07/2021

An in-depth study of the Saudi prison system by ALQST for Human Rights details sub-standard health and hygiene conditions, reckless medical negligence, and increasing use since 2017 of private detention facilities to carry out torture far from scrutiny.

ALQST’s report, “Shrouded in Secrecy: Prisons and Detention Centres in Saudi Arabia”, which builds on the organisation’s seven years of documenting human rights violations in Saudi Arabia, is enriched by a unique survey of current and recent prisoners and people close to them. 

The majority of the prisoners surveyed, both male and female, were unlawfully arrested, and three-quarters of them were held without charge or release beyond the statutory time limit. Half developed health problems as a result of their conditions of detention, and nearly all reported torture or other forms of ill-treatment including threats, beatings, solitary confinement, sleep deprivation and denial of family contact.

“The Saudi authorities have repeatedly failed to address the issues,” says ALQST Deputy Director Joshua Cooper. “More concerning still is the increased interference of State Security and the Royal Court in the judiciary and legal system since 2017, with thousands of people being detained on spurious charges.”

ALQST frames its findings in the context of Saudi Arabia’s international treaty obligations and deeply flawed domestic legislation. Its detailed recommendations include substantial legal reforms as well as measures to ensure the safety and welfare of prisoners, an end to the practice of torture, and the immediate and unconditional release of all prisoners of conscience.

Share Article
Execution of Saudi child offender raises fears for others
The execution of Jalal Labbad, a Saudi youth convicted of crimes allegedly committed when he was a minor, finally destroys the authorities’ claims to have ended this violation of international human rights law.
NGOs call for immediate release of ​Saudi human rights defender Mohammed al-Bejadi, still held two years after his sentence ended
We, the undersigned organisations, express deep concern over the continued arbitrary detention of the Saudi human rights defender Mohammed al-Bejadi more than two years beyond his sentence.
Ten Nubian Egyptians still in Saudi jail five years after arbitrary arrest
Five years on from their arrest in July 2020, ten members of Nubian civic associations in Saudi Arabia remain arbitrarily detained on lengthy prison sentences for staging a peaceful commemoration of the 1973 Oc