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Arabia
Religious police arrest mother for sitting with a man
2008-02-07
A 37-year-old American businesswoman and married mother of three is seeking justice after she was thrown in jail by Saudi Arabia's religious police for sitting with a male colleague at a Starbucks coffee shop in Riyadh. Yara, who does not want her last name published for fear of retribution, was bruised and crying when she was freed from a day in prison after she was strip-searched, threatened and forced to sign false confessions by the Kingdom's “Mutaween” police.

Her story offers a rare first-hand glimpse of the discrimination faced by women living in Saudi Arabia. In her first interview with the foreign press, Yara told The Times that she would remain in Saudi Arabia to challenge its harsh enforcement of conservative Islam rather than return to America. “If I want to make a difference I have to stick around. If I leave they win. I can't just surrender to the terrorist acts of these people,” said Yara, who moved to Jeddah eight years ago with her husband, a prominent businessman.

Her ordeal began with a routine visit to the new Riyadh offices of her finance company, where she is a managing partner. The electricity temporarily cut out, so Yara and her colleagues — who are all men — went to a nearby Starbucks to use its wireless internet. She sat in a curtained booth with her business partner in the café's “family” area, the only seats where men and women are allowed to mix.

For Yara, it was a matter of convenience. But in Saudi Arabia, public contact between unrelated men and women is strictly prohibited. “Some men came up to us with very long beards and white dresses. They asked ‘Why are you here together?'. I explained about the power being out in our office. They got very angry and told me what I was doing was a great sin,” recalled Yara, who wears an abaya and headscarf, like most Saudi women.
There's your first mistake. I'd suggest business casual.
The men were from Saudi Arabia's Commission for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, a police force of several thousand thugs men charged with enforcing dress codes, sex segregation and the observance of prayers.

Yara, whose parents are Jordanian and grew up in Salt Lake City, once believed that life in Saudi Arabia was becoming more liberal.
Guess you're wrong, huh?
But on Monday the religious police took her mobile phone, pushed her into a cab and drove her to Malaz prison in Riyadh. She was interrogated, strip-searched and forced to sign and fingerprint a series of confessions pleading guilty to her “crime”.

“They took me into a filthy bathroom, full of water and dirt. They made me take off my clothes and squat and they threw my clothes in this slush and made me put them back on,” she said. Eventually she was taken before a judge. “He said 'You are sinful and you are going to burn in hell'. I told him I was sorry. I was very submissive. I had given up. I felt hopeless,” she said.
Wrong again. Don't apologize to them. You're an American -- stand up.
Yara's husband, Hatim, used his political contacts in Jeddah to track her whereabouts. He was able to secure her release.
And where the hell was the American embassy?
“I was lucky. I met other women in that prison who don't have the connections I did,” she said. Her story has received rare coverage in Saudi Arabia, where the press has been sharply critical of the police.

Yara was visited yesterday by officials from the American Embassy, who promised they would file a report.
Oh that will help. How about getting Condi on the phone with the foreign minister?
An embassy official told The Times that it was being treated as “an internal Saudi matter” and refused to comment on her case.
Posted by:Steve White

#6  RD I knew most of that but to see it on film. Almost cried. And this is the Islam liberals defend!
Posted by: Icerigger   2008-02-07 08:42  

#5  RD that video makes me hope there is a hell.
Posted by: Gladys   2008-02-07 05:52  

#4  ...While stationed in the Magic Kingdom in 1995, I was at a market in Riyadh when I came around a corner and almost ran smack into a Mutaawa. As these guys are escorted by a Saudi policeman - carrying an 9mm submachine gun - I felt it best to apologize and go about my way. In perfect, American english, the Mutaawa smiled and said, "Don't worry about it - where you from?"

HE'D grown up in Chicago.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2008-02-07 04:55  

#3  It's my understanding that expat American women wear abaya and headscarf when they leave their guarded compounds, even when they go out as a group tour. Wearing Western garb is asking for a very different kind of trouble than poor Ms. Yara received. One of many reasons I wasn't in the least interested the several times Mr. Wife was offered an assignment over there.
Posted by: trailing wife   2008-02-07 04:54  

#2  recalled Yara, who wears an abaya and headscarf, like most Saudi women.

Looking like a duck eh, not an American. One might expect the duck treatment from those buggers in man-dresses in such cases. To confirm her ignorance, she stays on in the Kingdom. No sympathy from me.
Posted by: Besoeker   2008-02-07 01:18  

#1  NSFW:

Women of Islam Unite!
Posted by: RD   2008-02-07 00:30  

00:00