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This year, KSA publicized the Penal Law for Crimes of Terrorism. The new
regulation included terrorism provisions used to criminalize and to charge
virtually any Saudi citizen or association that would
criticize the Saudi system or Islam. Article one in the latter provisions
recited “Atheism and Questioning the Islamic Sharia” as terrorist threats.
“Calling for atheist thought in any form, or calling into question
the fundamentals of the Islamic religion on which this country is based.”
Declaring atheism as a crime, by the Saudi leaders, matches perfectly
the political/religious system of KSA. However, why did KSA wait until now
to take these precautions? Is atheism really threatening the kingdom?
Although, the Middle East director at Human Rights Watch Joe
Stork in an interview to the Chicago Sun-Times, described atheism in Saudi
Arabia as a “kind of a non-issue”, the traces of nonbelievers or doubter are
spotted.
In 2012, the Saudi authorities jailed Hamza Kashgari, a Saudi poet and
journalist, for two years without trial after sending three tweets containing
unconventional thoughts about Prophet Mohamad.
Similar thing happened with the founder of “Free Saudi Liberals" a
website that discussed religion in the KSA, Raif Badawi was sentenced to 10 years jail, 1000
lashes and a fine of 1 million riyals ($266,600).
Fahad Alfahad, Saudi human rights activists, declared to the Global
Post: “I know at least six atheists who confirmed that to me. Six or seven
years ago, I would not even have heard one person say that. Not even a best
friend would confess that to me.”
Despite all these effort to suppress people and rule them by
the unquestionable religious power, some people fight and express their free
thoughts believing that a day will come when the power of mind conquers the
power of religion.
I cannot see how faith could be forced over people by law.
Threating people, jailing them, and hurting them physically and psychologically
would not protect the kingdom forever. Declaring a low against atheism is a
clear confession of its existence and of its capacity to threaten
the system.
You can forbid people from talking but you cannot control
their ideas.
A man may die, nations may rise and fall, but an idea
lives on. Ideas have endurance without death.
John
F. Kennedy
Rihab
Rihab
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