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Saudi Shiites hail HRW report on injustice against them
By: Mohamed Ali
NEW YORK, The United States: Saudi Shiite activists have hailed
last week’s report of Human Rights Watch in which it said the Saudi
government has not done enough to address fair treatment for the
Shiite Muslim community.
HRW called for Saudi Arabia to ensure equality for its minority Shiite
population, which has been at the center of recent tensions.
In a 32-page report, the group highlighted some of the more violent
outbreaks of violence in Saudi Arabia in years.
Clashes between Shiite pilgrims and religious police broke out in the
holy city of Medina in February, with claims of shootings and
stabbings of Shiite clerics.
Meanwhile, discrimination continues to plague most of the nation, with
Sunni scholars teaching Shiite students they are infidels. Sunni
judges often disqualify Shiites on religious grounds and extrajudicial
action runs rampant, the rights group said.
National leaders have pushed for some modest reforms, calling for
national dialogue among the Sunni and Shiite leaders in the kingdom
for the first time in 2003. Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz,
meanwhile, called for religious tolerance during high-profile speeches
in New York and Madrid in 2008.
Human Rights Watch, however, said Saudi leaders have not done enough
to address domestic concerns regarding these issues.
"It is time for a new approach that treats Shiite as citizens with
equal rights," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa
director at Human Rights Watch.
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"Knowledge is
better than wealth because it protects you while you have to
guard wealth. it decreases if you keep on spending it but the
more you make use of knowledge ,the more it increases . what you
get through wealth disappears as soon as wealth disappears but
what you achieve through knowledge will remain even after you."MORE
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