Channel 4, Fatima Manji, 10 March 2014
Exclusive:
in her first television interview, the former wife of King Abdullah of Saudi
Arabia claims her four daughters have suffered years trapped in the royal
compound in Jeddah.
Channel 4
News has broadcast the first television interview with the former wife of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, writes Fatima Manji.
She has
gone public about what she claims is years of abuse against their four
daughters. It is an extraordinary insight into the House of Saud, a secretive
dynasty, which has held absolute power for more than 80 years.
Princess
Alanoud Al Fayez was married to King Abdullah at the age of 15. It was a
marriage arranged by her uncle and she had never laid eyes on him until their
wedding day. Soon she had four daughters - princesses Sahar, Maha, Hala and
Jawaher (pictured above) - but no son.
The girls
led a privileged childhood - skiing trips in the Alps, visits abroad. But after
their mother was divorced by the king, she says things deteriorated and she
eventually fled to London.
Trapped
For the
last 13 years the girls say they have been trapped in the royal compound in
Jeddah. They cannot leave without armed guards and are barred from leaving the
country.
Their
mother has not seen them in person for a decade. She tells me: "They are
really in a terrible state, especially Jawaher and Sahar. She's telling me,
'Mummy, we are trying to hold on to our sanity'. They are hanging to life. They
don't deserve what happened to them."
She sent me
pictures of the compound where she says they are held and a surveillance tower
watches them day and night. She says their villa is no gilded cage, but a house
is slipping into ruin, with leaking pipes and shattered windows: "People
don't realise how hard our situation is. They still see us as 'pampered' Saudi
Princesses. We never were. We suffer on a daily basis."
No way out
She told me
she was speaking out after being threatened by her father - the king. Sahar
writes: "Our father said that we had no way out and that after his death
our brothers will continue detaining us."
A few hours
ago Sahar sent me a long email detailing her views on Saudi society. She says:
"Women and children [in Saudi Arabia] are abused, while their male
guardian enjoy privileges granted by the court in cases of domestic abuse.
Princes and the elite entourage are protected and the victims and their
families suffer injustice."
In London,
their mother says she has tried everything to get her daughters released. Her
lawyers have asked to visit the princesses in Saudi and have gone to the UN's
special rapporteur on human rights.
Anorexia
Their
mother says she is especially worried about Princess Hala, who is suffering
from extreme anorexia and psychological problems. She claims she was jailed
after she got a job in a local hospital and spoke up about human rights abuses.
Channel 4
News put this and all the other claims to the government of Saudi Arabia though
their embassy here in London. But so far we have had no response.
The house
of Saud is one of the most secretive in the world. The king, now thought to be
89, is worth an estimated £11bn, and is feted by the west.
Just a few
weeks ago Prince Charles paid a visit - and President Obama will visit later
this month. Yet the princesses say the west remains silent on human rights
abuses in the country, particularly the treatment of women.


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.