  
Christian Persecution: Saudi Arabia
FLASH NEWS from COMPASS DIRECT
Global News from the Frontlines
SAUDI ARABIA STARTS DEPORTING EXPATRIATE CHRISTIAN
PRISONERS
First of Released Christians Arrive in Manila, Amsterdam
by Barbara G. Baker
ISTANBUL, July 14 (Compass) -- Five of some 20 expatriate
Christians arrested in Riyadh last month were deported by the Saudi Arabian
government to their home countries today. Four Filipinos and a
Dutch national were believed to have been expelled for involvement in
Christian activities, which are strictly forbidden in the Muslim kingdom.
At least eight other Filipinos arrested in the police crackdown on
suspected Christian worshippers have reportedly been transferred
out of detention cells, in preparation for their imminent deportation later
this week.
Riyadh sources also confirmed that Saudi authorities had promised
to return the confiscated passport of Yolanda Aguilar, enabling the
young mother to apply for an exit visa to return with her month-old baby
daughter to the Philippines. After Aguilar's husband Rufino fled
Saudi Arabia on June 11 to avoid arrest, his nine-month pregnant wife was
detained and interrogated by Saudi police several times. She has
remained under semi-house arrest at the hospital compound where she gave
birth.
Filipino Christians Ariel Ordona, Angelito Hizon, Ruben Aguirre and
Gali Afurong arrived shortly before noon today in Manila on a direct
Saudia Air flight. They were met by relatives and members of their home churches.
According to a church leader who talked personally with three of the four
men, all the prisoners had been surprised when they were told suddenly
that they were being released and deported without a formal trial. The
released Christians said they expected more of the former prisoners to
arrive on the next flight to Manila from Riyadh tomorrow.
"Only one of the men I talked with was harmed physically while under
arrest," the church leader said.
From Holland, Dirk den Hertog confirmed that his brother Wim den Hertog
arrived early Tuesday morning on a direct flight from Riyadh to
Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport. The 35-year-old Dutch businessman was
reunited with his wife and three children 31 days after his arrest. During
his detention he was held incommunicado from any diplomatic access. His
family was eventually allowed to speak with him three times by telephone.
"We have not been informed officially about the charges, nor were we given
any access to visit him while he was in prison," spokesperson Bridget
Tazelaar confirmed from the Dutch Foreign Ministry in The Hague today.
"According to (Wim den Hertog)," Tazelaar told Compass, "he is not allowed
to go back. But I cannot confirm that."
A Dutch friend who spoke with den Hertog today told Compass that he said
he had been treated well. "Every day he got vegetables and all kinds of
fruit, and he didn't have any physical abuse, only psychological
pressure," the source said. Contrary to earlier reports that the Dutch
citizen had been arrested by the "muttawa" (religious police), den Hertog
stated that his case had been handled by the Ministry of Interior.
The Dutch Christian said he was kept in solitary confinement for the first
two days, and questioned for many hours during the initial 17 days of his
detention. "But he told me that last weekend there came a sudden change in
the attitudes of people who were handling his case," the source told
Compass. After his transfer to another cell, he said one inmate tried to
convert him to Islam so he could "preach Islam in the Netherlands."
When the newly installed government of Philippines President Joseph
Estrada failed to comment on the arrest of its citizens, the Catholic
Bishops Conference of the Philippines made a public appeal for
presidential intervention on July 9. Most of the half-million Filipinos
working on contract in Saudi Arabia and other Arab Gulf nations are Roman
Catholic.
On behalf of the bishops, spokesman Monsignor Pedro Quitorio told Agence
France Press that some of the prisoners had been tortured to reveal the
names of other Filipinos living in Riyadh who were practicing Christians.
According to the Vatican news service Fides, one of the Filipino prisoners
carried marks of physical torture when he was released after 14 days of
interrogation. Gaudencio Lorenzo "suffered several broken bones and
multiple wounds," Fides reported. Another source, who had spoken with a
Christian living in Riyadh, said Lorenzo had been forced to convert to
Islam before his release.
Reportedly at least one prisoner admitted he had been released under the
condition that he not discuss his detention. "We were treated fairly,
given food and soap, and a doctor checked my blood pressure," one Filipino
Christian told a close friend in Riyadh after his release.
Although a high-level member of the royal family insisted publicly for the
first time last year that Saudi government policy allows private
non-Muslim religious worship within homes, foreign Christians continue to
report police investigation and harassment of such worship services.
In March 1997, Filipino Christian Donato Lama was deported after being
subjected to 17 months in prison and 70 lashes. He was arrested when
police discovered a photo album snapshot of him leading a Catholic
communion service in a private home.
"Freedom of religion does not exist," the U.S. State Department's 1997
Human Rights Report on Saudi Arabia states. "Islam is the official
religion, and all citizens must be Muslims. The government prohibits the
public practice of other religions."
END
Copyright 1998 Compass Direct
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Updated: 13 July 2002
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