Riyadh & New York: A Saudi crackdown on prominent citizens who had been critical of the government targeted people who “were pushing an extremist agenda” and took funding from foreign countries, according to Foreign Minister Adel Al Jubeir.
Saudi Arabia this month arrested a group of clerics, academics and businessmen — many who’d criticised the government or its policies in the past. “When we expect others to have zero tolerance for extremism and terrorism and incitement, we ourselves will live by this,” Al Jubeir said on Wednesday in an interview with Bloomberg Television in New York. “The individuals who were detained were pushing an extremist agenda. They were inciting people, and this was not going to stand.”
Among those detained by authorities were clerics Salman Al Oudah and Awad Al Qarni — both independent of the official religious establishment — as well as poet Ziad Bin Nahit, academic Mustafa Al Hassan and businessman Essam Al Zamil, according to Twitter posts and interviews with relatives and friends. Bloomberg was unable to independently verify their detention and the government’s Centre for International Communication has not responded to requests for comment.
“We found that a number of them were working with foreign countries and receiving funding from foreign countries in order to destabilise Saudi Arabia,” Al Jubeir said, without naming the detained. “When the investigations are concluded we will release the information.”
Al Jubeir maintained the kingdom’s tough stance on Qatar, its tiny neighbour to the east. The country is engaged in an extended feud with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt that shows little sign of abating.
“Qatar has to stop supporting terrorists, stop financing terrorists, stop providing safe harbour to people implicated and wanted for terror financing,” Al Jubeir said.
He also came down hard on Iran, Saudi Arabia’s longtime arch rival.
“Iran is a country that’s on a rampage. It’s the number one state sponsor of terrorism,” he said. “Iran is a huge threat to all of us in the region and unless it changes its policy our region will always be troubled.”
Asked about the kingdom’s commitment to Saudi Vision 2030, a blueprint announced last year to diversify the economy away from oil, Al Jubeir said the government has taken tangible steps toward implementing the plan.
“We had no entertainment — now we have music concerts, we have theatre, we’re building an opera,” he said. “We changed our laws where we now give companies direct licensing to have retail operations in Saudi Arabia. We have diversified the investment portfolio of our Public Investment Fund, which is our sovereign wealth fund, so we invest more outside Saudi Arabia.”
“These are things that are noticeable,” he said.