Following are excerpts
from an interview with Saudi journalist and TV host Nadin Al-Badir,
which aired on Dream2 TV on January 10, 2012:
Nadin Al-Badir:
28-year-old Hassan Nabil Hmeid from Abha was harassed [by the religious
police] because he grew his hair long. At the end of the day, all the
matters they pursue are superficial ones. They have no depth. They are
concerned only with external looks. Ultimately, [Hmeid] died as a result
of the beating he received. Some say that he died when he tried to flee
from them. What matters is that this young man's life can to an end
because of backward, reactionary people, who would like to take us back
hundreds of years in time. I don't think the situation back then was
as bad as they would like it to be.
Interviewer: But
some might say that these are isolated cases. Have they grown in frequency
in recent times?
Nadin Al-Badir:
I could give you many examples, but we don't have enough time.
Interviewer: Just
a few examples. There's the well-known case of the fire…
Nadin Al-Badir:
A fire broke out in a girls' school in Saudi Arabia. It would have been
easy to extinguish the fire without any girl getting hurt. But members
of the Authority for the Promotion of Virtue stood at the door of the
school and prevented any student from leaving, because the girls were
not wearing the hijab. How were they supposed to get a hijab
when the school was going up in flames? They prevented the fire brigade
from entering to extinguish the fire, and they prevented the parents
from going in…
Interviewer: Why?
Nadin Al-Badir:
Because the girls were not wearing the abaya. The girls were
right behind the door…
Interviewer: But
it is a duty to save them from death. Who cares if they are wearing
the abaya or not?
Nadin Al-Badir:
Their mission is to save you from the Hellfire, not from death. They
believe that you are martyred in such a case. I don't know what was
going through their minds at that moment.
Interviewer: Saving
them from the Hellfire is more important than saving them from death…
Nadin Al-Badir:
I'm talking about 13-year-old girls, not university students. These
were schoolgirls. 15 girls from the school died – because of the Authority
for Prevention of Vice and Promotion of Virtue, and not because of the
fire. They could easily have been rescued. Has any member of the Authority
been placed on trial? Not that we've seen. The department of girls'
education was annexed to the Education Ministry, but the Authority is
never held accountable. It punishes, but is never punished itself. You
can never get justice. Even if they stab or kill you, nobody can hold
them accountable.
Interviewer: The
Authority is never held accountable even if it makes a mistake?
Nadin Al-Badir:
No. You can file a complaint or a lawsuit against it. Many have been
filed, but we've never heard of anyone being punished for attacking
a citizen.
[…]
Interviewer: Some
Saudis, who support the Authority, believe that there is a need for
it, and say that anyone who fears it must be deviating from the right
path. They believe that it protects society, our children, and our families.
Nadin Al-Badir:
I haven't noticed that they protect our children and our families. The
rate of all forms of sexual harassment is the highest it has ever been.
Interviewer: In
Saudi Arabia?
Nadin Al-Badir:
Yes. Droves of young men might harass a girl, and I've never seen the
Authority preventing these harassments. The Authority has absolutely
nothing to do with protection. The Authority is the enemy of society.
How can it protect it?
[…]
It is well-known that
most members of the Authority are ex-cons, who used to be drug users
or drug dealers. Even Sheik Abd Al-Muhsen Al-Abikan, advisor to the
royal court, suggested that the Authority should be abolished. He said
that most of them were drug dealers, drug users, thieves, and ex-cons
who repented, all of a sudden, and became violently extreme. These people,
according to Sheik Al-Abikan, should not be allowed to have such authorities,
because they use it in inappropriate ways.
[…]