Saudi Arabia's shadowy power struggles playing out on Canadian soil
Tyler Dawson POSTMEDIA
The disappearance of a Saudi activist after a visit to the Ottawa embassy and the widening of a legal battle between the Kingdom and a former Saudi spymaster from U.S. to Canadian courts, mark a shadowy Saudi power struggle playing out within Canada’s borders, even as the international community looks more closely at Saudi actions
.
© Provided by National Post Omar Abdulaziz, one of the Saudi dissidents who has been pressured by the Kingdom since moving to Canada.
Saudi Arabia has long sought out and pressured dissidents abroad, culminating in the assassination and dismemberment of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October 2018.
Canadians are now learning that Saudi’s power struggles and suppression are also playing out here.
Michael Chong, the Conservative foreign affairs critic, said in a statement they want to see the Liberals create a “robust plan to counter foreign influence operations on Canadian soil.”
“The government’s response to Canadians facing intimidation and harassment by foreign agents is wholly inadequate,” the statement said.
Chong’s office declined an interview request from the National Post . Bill Blair, the public safety minister, has previously said: “We are aware of incidents in which foreign actors have attempted to monitor, intimidate or threaten Canadians and those living in Canada.”
“It is completely unacceptable and we will never tolerate foreign actors threatening Canada’s national security or the safety of our citizens and residents,” Blair said.
Saudi Arabia has long sought out and pressured dissidents abroad, culminating in the assassination and dismemberment of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October 2018.
Canadians are now learning that Saudi’s power struggles and suppression are also playing out here.
Michael Chong, the Conservative foreign affairs critic, said in a statement they want to see the Liberals create a “robust plan to counter foreign influence operations on Canadian soil.”
“The government’s response to Canadians facing intimidation and harassment by foreign agents is wholly inadequate,” the statement said.
Chong’s office declined an interview request from the National Post . Bill Blair, the public safety minister, has previously said: “We are aware of incidents in which foreign actors have attempted to monitor, intimidate or threaten Canadians and those living in Canada.”
“It is completely unacceptable and we will never tolerate foreign actors threatening Canada’s national security or the safety of our citizens and residents,” Blair said.
Spymaster hiding in Canada alleged to have stolen $4.5B from Kingdom of Saudia Arabia in new lawsuit
Saudis put pressure on another dissident living in Canada as RCMP warns about threats made by regime
Since 2017, Saudi Arabia has been experiencing internal drama, including a palace coup that saw the line of succession reorganized, the mass arrest of senior Saudis, the repression of dissidents, and the disappearance of family and friends linked to dissidents who’ve sheltered abroad.
Last Friday, the United States released its classified report on the death of Khashoggi, linking it to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, next in line for the throne. In the days since, there has been an escalation in the drama playing out between Saudi Arabia and Western nations.
On Monday, the Post reported the Saudi government was launching a new investigation against blogger Raif Badawi and his Canadian wife Ensaf Haidar.
Thomas Juneau, a professor in the faculty of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa, said while there has been a notable change in tone — frostier under the Biden administration than the Trump administration — it’s also clear there will not be a major change in the United States’ relationship with Saudi Arabia.
That constrains Canada’s margin of manoeuvre, said Juneau. “Now that the U.S. has clearly signalled that it will not fundamentally change the relationship with Saudi Arabia, it becomes much more difficult and costly for American allies in the west to change their relationship with Saudi Arabia.”
In early February, a Ahmed Alharby, a Saudi who’d sought asylum in Canada and had been living in Montreal, went dark, blocking fellow activists on social media and vanishing from group messages, the Washington Post reported.
Saudi dissidents in Canada wrote on social media that Alharby told them he had visited the Saudi embassy in Ottawa, and told reporters at the Toronto Star and Washington Post that he’d been interrogated.
By mid-February, a new Twitter account allegedly belonging to Alharby popped up: It featured the face of Mohammed bin Salman, as the banner image. Alharby had returned to the Kingdom, said one of the new account’s tweets.
Since 2017, Saudi Arabia has been experiencing internal drama, including a palace coup that saw the line of succession reorganized, the mass arrest of senior Saudis, the repression of dissidents, and the disappearance of family and friends linked to dissidents who’ve sheltered abroad.
Last Friday, the United States released its classified report on the death of Khashoggi, linking it to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, next in line for the throne. In the days since, there has been an escalation in the drama playing out between Saudi Arabia and Western nations.
On Monday, the Post reported the Saudi government was launching a new investigation against blogger Raif Badawi and his Canadian wife Ensaf Haidar.
Thomas Juneau, a professor in the faculty of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa, said while there has been a notable change in tone — frostier under the Biden administration than the Trump administration — it’s also clear there will not be a major change in the United States’ relationship with Saudi Arabia.
That constrains Canada’s margin of manoeuvre, said Juneau. “Now that the U.S. has clearly signalled that it will not fundamentally change the relationship with Saudi Arabia, it becomes much more difficult and costly for American allies in the west to change their relationship with Saudi Arabia.”
In early February, a Ahmed Alharby, a Saudi who’d sought asylum in Canada and had been living in Montreal, went dark, blocking fellow activists on social media and vanishing from group messages, the Washington Post reported.
Saudi dissidents in Canada wrote on social media that Alharby told them he had visited the Saudi embassy in Ottawa, and told reporters at the Toronto Star and Washington Post that he’d been interrogated.
By mid-February, a new Twitter account allegedly belonging to Alharby popped up: It featured the face of Mohammed bin Salman, as the banner image. Alharby had returned to the Kingdom, said one of the new account’s tweets.
© Ozan Kose/AFP via Getty Images Friends of murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi attend an event marking the second-year anniversary of his assassination, October 02, 2020.
That’s not the only instance of dissidents being pressured in Canada.
The high-profile YouTuber Omar Abdulaziz, who lives in Montreal, has been pressured to return to the Kingdom, and has been warned of such plots by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
And, former spymaster Saad Aljabri is waging a two-front legal battle, fighting off corruption allegations in an Ontario lawsuit while suing bin Salman and others for allegedly sending a hit squad to Canada to kill him. The alleged Tiger squad was turned back by Canadian border officials.
There have been, in recent days, a number of other international incidents related to Saudi actions abroad.
Australian media reported Monday that Osama al-Hasani, an Australian-Saudi citizen who had flown to Morocco to be with his wife, was detained in Tangier on a Saudi extradition request.
“Four hours after his arrival, the Moroccan police raided … our house and arrested him in front of me and our four-month-old baby,” Hana al-Hasani told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
As well, Reporters without Borders filed legal documents in Germany seeking an investigation into alleged crimes against humanity perpetrated by bin Salman, mainly in the repression of journalists.
“The official opening of a criminal investigation in Germany into the crimes against humanity in Saudi Arabia would be a world first,” Christian Mihr, the Germany director, said, according to media reports.
• Email: tdawson@postmedia.com | Twitter: tylerrdawson
That’s not the only instance of dissidents being pressured in Canada.
The high-profile YouTuber Omar Abdulaziz, who lives in Montreal, has been pressured to return to the Kingdom, and has been warned of such plots by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
And, former spymaster Saad Aljabri is waging a two-front legal battle, fighting off corruption allegations in an Ontario lawsuit while suing bin Salman and others for allegedly sending a hit squad to Canada to kill him. The alleged Tiger squad was turned back by Canadian border officials.
There have been, in recent days, a number of other international incidents related to Saudi actions abroad.
Australian media reported Monday that Osama al-Hasani, an Australian-Saudi citizen who had flown to Morocco to be with his wife, was detained in Tangier on a Saudi extradition request.
“Four hours after his arrival, the Moroccan police raided … our house and arrested him in front of me and our four-month-old baby,” Hana al-Hasani told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
As well, Reporters without Borders filed legal documents in Germany seeking an investigation into alleged crimes against humanity perpetrated by bin Salman, mainly in the repression of journalists.
“The official opening of a criminal investigation in Germany into the crimes against humanity in Saudi Arabia would be a world first,” Christian Mihr, the Germany director, said, according to media reports.
• Email: tdawson@postmedia.com | Twitter: tylerrdawson
No comments:
Post a Comment