Oman Jails Rights Activist Who Wrote Letter To Obama
Now Reading
Oman Jails Rights Activist Who Wrote Letter To Obama

Oman Jails Rights Activist Who Wrote Letter To Obama

Said Jadad found guilty of “undermining the prestige of the state”, was fined and sentenced to three years in jail.

Gulf Business

An Omani court jailed a prominent activist for three years on Sunday for a range of offences including undermining the state, a charge a newspaper said was related to an open letter to U.S. President Barack Obama about human rights in the country.

Western-allied Oman, which experienced Arab Spring protests in 2011, has tried to clamp down on public dissent, arresting rights activists who criticise authorities on social media.

Lawyer Yaboub al-Harthi said the Court of First Instance in Muscat had found Said Jadad, who took part in the 2011 protests, guilty of “undermining the prestige of the state”, inciting the public to join an illegal gathering and using the internet to publish materials that disturb public order.

As well as the jail sentence, Jadad was also ordered to pay fines totalling OMR1,700 ($4,470). The court set a OMR2,000 rial bail for any decision to free him pending an appeal.

The lawyer said Jadad intended to appeal against the ruling.

Omani online newspaper Mowatin (www.mowatinoman.net) said the charge of undermining the state stemmed from a 2013 open letter to Obama in which Jadad had expressed “dismay” over U.S. policies regarding human rights in the Gulf region.

“We expect the United States, being a superpower, to always stand by the people and to support the principles of democracy and human rights,” he wrote.

The newspaper said Jadad’s lawyer had argued in court that the message came under the right to freedom of opinion and expression and that the accused had personally suffered from human rights abuses, including being detained for seven days without a warrant and having his documents seized without a court ruling.

The Monitor of Human Rights in Oman, in a report on human rights abuses in 2014, said a number of activists had been detained. They included Talib al-Maamari, a member of Oman’s Shura council, a consultative body, who was then jailed for four years for undermining the state and other offences.


© 2021 MOTIVATE MEDIA GROUP. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Scroll To Top