Saudi Arabia unleashes new wave of arrests against Palestinians suspected of ties to 'resistance': report

The latest campaign has left Palestinian residents in the Gulf country in a state of fear, with some opting to leave.
2 min read
19 February, 2020
Yet the latest wave targets 'everyone' with suspected links to ‘resistance’ [Getty]

Saudi Arabia has unleashed a new wave of arrests of Palestinians living in the kingdom, targeting all those suspected of having ties to the "resistance", Middle East Eye reported on Tuesday.

A dozen Palestinians were arrested in February last year, followed by an even harsher campaign in April, which saw the arrests of dozens of businessmen, academics and students.

An unnamed Hamas official cited in the report said those arrested were overwhelmingly Hamas members, and had resided in Saudi Arabia for decades.

Yet the latest wave targets "everyone" with suspected links to the "resistance", the official said.

Palestinians living in the Gulf kingdom live in fear of being targeted.

The fear of being targeted has created a "situation of extreme incitement against Palestinians" which "escalated" after the appointment of Mohammed bin Salman as crown prince, a Palestinian resident of Jeddah, who spoke to MEE on a condition of anonymity, said.

The changing atmosphere in the country has led a number of Palestinians to leave the country, terrified of an imminent crackdown, the source added.

Hamas have tried to maintain a balanced relationship with Saudi Arabia despite the friction between their policies on a host of regional and international issues. 

Read more: Palestinian movement Hamas demands release of senior official detained in Saudi Arabia 

Yet relations have deteriorated since the rise to power of bin Salman, who has taken unprecedented moves to normalise relations with Israel, the existence of which Hamas refuses to recognise.

The Geneva based Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor estimates that some 60 Palestinians have been subjected to forced disappearance by the Saudi state, and have called on authorities to immediately disclose their fate.

The latest crackdown coincides with the trial of Mohammed Saleh al-Khodari, a senior Hamas member, who was arrested in April last year along with his son, in a move the Palestinian militant group called "strange and reprehensible".

Al-Khodari's three decades long residence in Jeddah and close relationship to Saudi authorities, were insufficient grounds to spare the "ambassador of Hamas" reprieve, who has been held in solitary confinement in Dhahban prison for three months, according to his brother.

The two are among 14 other prisoners set to stand before the Riyadh criminal court next month.

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