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Singularity
08-09-2018, 01:37 AM
https://www.vox.com/2018/8/8/1766518...d-samar-badawi

The Saudi Arabia-Canada fight, explained in under 600 words
A short guide to why Saudi Arabia is waging a diplomatic war on Canada.
By Jennifer Williams@jenn_ruthjennifer@vox.com Aug 8, 2018, 5:00pm EDT
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (L) and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Drew Angerer/Getty Images; Albin Lohr-Jones/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images
Saudi Arabia and Canada are in the middle of a full-on diplomatic crisis.

In the past week, Saudi Arabia has:

Kicked out the Canadian ambassador
Recalled its ambassador from Canada
Suspended new trade and investment with Canada
Canceled direct flights to Toronto by Saudi’s state airline
Started selling off its Canadian assets
Announced a plan to relocate Saudi scholarship students in Canada to other countries
Begun to transfer all Saudi patients out of Canadian hospitals
So what did Canada do that was so offensive? Its foreign ministry sent a tweet.

Yes, seriously. Here’s what’s going on.

The Saudi-Canada spat started over a tweet
The fight started last week, when Amnesty International learned the Saudi government had arrested several female human rights activists.

One was Samar Badawi. An acclaimed activist herself, she’s also the sister of Raif Badawi, a blogger who’s been imprisoned in Saudi since 2012 and subjected to public flogging. Raif Badawi’s wife and their three children fled to Quebec in 2015 and have since become Canadian citizens.

On Thursday, Canada’s foreign minister, Chrystia Freeland, tweeted she was “Very alarmed to learn” of Samar Badawi’s arrest, adding, “Canada stands together with the Badawi family in this difficult time, and we continue to strongly call for the release of both Raif and Samar Badawi.”


The next day, Canada’s foreign ministry issued a tweet calling on Saudi Arabia to “immediately release” Samar Badawi as well as “all other peaceful #humanrights activists.”

That royally pissed off the Saudi government.

In a series of tweets on Sunday, Saudi’s foreign ministry slammed Canada’s statement as “an overt and blatant interference in the internal affairs of the Kingdom of #SaudiArabia.”

The fight just escalated from there — on the Saudi side, at least.

The Saudi crown prince is not messing around
The recent arrests are part of a wider human rights crackdown by Mohammed bin Salman, the 32-year-old crown prince who’s next in line to the throne.

MBS (as he’s known) has been hailed in the West as an “ambitious, energetic” young “reformer” who’s upending the kingdom’s conservative ways and ushering in a new era of modernization.

But while he’s initiated some reforms, including lifting the ban on women driving, he’s also ruthlessly consolidated power and cracked down on dissent, arresting many of the activists — including Samar Badawi — who championed those same reforms.


In November, as part of an “anti-corruption campaign,” MBS rounded up hundreds of influential businessmen, including many in the royal family, imprisoning them in the Riyadh Ritz-Carlton and seizing millions of dollars.

MBS has also pushed an aggressive foreign policy — overseeing the disastrous war in Yemen, spearheading a diplomatic blockade of Qatar, and cultivating close ties with the Trump administration.

Bessma Momani at Canada’s University of Waterloo says the fight between Saudi Arabia and Canada should be interpreted in this context. “[T]his is less about Canadian foreign policy than it is about the Saudis,” Momani wrote in the Globe and Mail.

“This is a new, bold Saudi Arabia trying to make its mark on global and regional affairs,” Momani continued. “Led by the young and very brash Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ... this latest move is yet another red line that is being used to rile up nationalists and assert Saudi dominance.”

So while this fight may have technically started over a tweet, it has a lot more to do with one man’s power and ambition. And that man is next in line to rule Saudi Arabia.
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Singularity
08-11-2018, 09:26 AM
https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/...g-13147078.php

It's open season in Saudi Arabia on everything Canadian
Donna Abu-Nasr, Bloomberg Published 10:20 am PDT, Friday, August 10, 2018
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in New York on March 27, 2018. Photo: Bloomberg Photo By Jeenah Moon. / © 2018 Bloomberg Finance LP
Photo: Bloomberg Photo By Jeenah Moon.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in New York on March 27, 2018.

It's open season in the Saudi media for all things Canadian.

The kingdom's rulers this week set the two nations off on a diplomatic and trade brawl, and now journalists have been shoved into the ring.

Al Riyadh daily published a cartoon showing a red maple leaf dropping between the bare legs of a man wearing bright red socks and shiny black shoes, with the caption, "The fig leaf has fallen." Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has gained attention for his loud footwear.

The accompanying article quoting various analysts claimed Canada was spreading chaos in Saudi ally Egypt, burnishing the image of terrorists and offering shelter to the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamic group that opposes absolute monarchies and is banned in Saudi Arabia.

A spat triggered by Ottawa's call for the release of women's rights activists detained in Saudi Arabia has rapidly escalated. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi king's son and de facto ruler of the world's biggest oil exporter, moved to expel the Canadian ambassador, freeze new trade deals, unload assets in Canada and cancel direct flights to Toronto by the state airline.


The U.S. is now trying to do behind-the-scenes damage control after being caught off guard, according to a senior U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

In the meantime, other Saudi media -- privately owned but government-guided -- have joined in the Canada-bashing.

Al Arabiya TV alleged that Canadian jails are packed because of delays in trials. It also claimed excessive force is used against inmates, food and health services are bad and there's no law that bans the detention of children.

Homelessness and racism are widespread in Canada, pictures in Al Riyadh newspaper purported to show. In another article, a headline in the paper claimed the kingdom's decision to freeze relations with Canada had "caused confusion" among companies with 100 billion riyals ($26.7 billion) in Saudi-related investments.

Saudi Arabia's central bank and pension funds have already begun selling Canadian assets, according to people familiar with the matter, but in Canada businesses don't appear overly worried.

A writer in Al Hayat newspaper said in a piece published Thursday that Ottawa cannot accept it has failed to match an economically superior Saudi Arabia.

Canadian "hypocrisy is evident in the government's dealings with its indigenous people who suffer from drug abuse, racism and social discrimination and who undoubtedly have been subjected to the most extreme levels of violence, from murder to homelessness and other indignities."

One Twitter user who responded to the Saudi assault was Jordan Peterson, a Toronto psychology professor whom Al Arabiya claimed was a political prisoner. He tweeted a photo of himself Thursday lounging in a leather chair: "Help! I'm being held prisoner in Canada."

"And, in case it's not clear. I am no fan of the Saudi state. I think we should refuse all their oil, as of now. We have plenty in Alberta," he added in another tweet.
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