Saudi human rights defender Mohammed Al Otaibi serving a 17-year prison sentence
Timeline
April 14, 2021: MENA Rights Group and ALQST for Human Rights request the urgent intervention of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders.
April 2021: Al Otaibi’s additional one-year sentence is increased to a three-year sentence by the SCC on appeal, resulting in a 17-year prison term in total.
January 31, 2021: Al Otaibi ends his hunger strike.
January 11, 2021: Al Otaibi starts a hunger strike asking to be moved to a prison closer to his family.
December 1, 2020: Al Otaibi is sentenced to one more year in prison based on the new charges brought against him.
July 25, 2019: In a new trial, Al Otaibi faces new charges of “fleeing justice”, “going to Qatar”, “communicating with foreign entities” and “interfering in public affairs”.
November 20, 2018: The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention adopts Opinion No. 68/2018, qualifying Al Otaibi’s detention as arbitrary and calling for his immediate release.
February 22, 2018: Al Otaibi appeals the sentencing, which is later upheld.
January 25, 2018: The SCC deliberates in a closed hearing and sentences him to 14 years in prison.
June 12, 2017: The SCC resumes the proceedings against him.
May 28, 2017: Al Otaibi is forcibly returned to Saudi Arabia, where he is arrested by the Al Mabahith and transferred to the Al Mabahith prison in Dammam. He is held incommunicado for two weeks.
May 24, 2017: On his way to Oslo, Al Otaibi is arrested at Doha International Airport.
March 30, 2017: Al Otaibi flees to Qatar to avoid prosecution for his human rights activities. He obtains refugee status and is supposed to be resettled in Norway.
October 30, 2016: Al Otaibi is summoned once again and charged, inter alia, with “harming the reputation of the Kingdom before the international community and human rights bodies”.
March 2014: Al Otaibi is summoned for questioning again by the Public Prosecution. He is placed under surveillance, which includes his social media accounts.
May 4, 2013: The Union for Human Rights is forced to halt its activities. Requests to officially register the association are rejected.
April 3, 2013: Along with a group of other Saudi activists, Al Otaibi participates in the creation of the Union for Human Rights. Shortly after the association’s establishment, the Prosecution launches a criminal investigation against its founding members. Al Otaibi, along with three other activists, is summoned for “co-founding an illegal association”.