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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Saudi Arabia court upholds prison term for critic

The ruling, confirmed late on Wednesday, also upheld a 20-year travel ban on Abdulrahman al-Sadhan

AP/PTI Dubai Published 08.10.21, 02:04 AM
The case against him may have roots in an elaborate ploy that began in Silicon Valley and sparked a federal case against two Twitter employees accused of spying for Saudi Arabia. The men allegedly accessed the user data of over 6,000 Twitter accounts.

The case against him may have roots in an elaborate ploy that began in Silicon Valley and sparked a federal case against two Twitter employees accused of spying for Saudi Arabia. The men allegedly accessed the user data of over 6,000 Twitter accounts. Shutterstock

A court in Saudi Arabia upheld a 20-year prison term imposed on a Saudi aid worker who had criticised the government on Twitter, drawing a rare public rebuke from the US in another sign of tension between the Biden administration and the kingdom.

The ruling, confirmed late on Wednesday, also upheld a 20-year travel ban on Abdulrahman al-Sadhan.

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The case against him may have roots in an elaborate ploy that began in Silicon Valley and sparked a federal case against two Twitter employees accused of spying for Saudi Arabia. The men allegedly accessed the user data of over 6,000 Twitter accounts.

Al-Sadhan’s family has said his identity appears to have been among those leaked to Saudi authorities as the person behind an anonymous Arabic Twitter account that was critical of the government.

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