Saudis Free Student Sentenced to 34 Years for Her Tweets

Doctoral student Salma al-Shehab was accused in 2022 of 'destabilizing the social fabric'
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Feb 10, 2025 11:09 AM CST
Saudis Free Woman Sentenced to 34 Years for Her Tweets
Doctoral student and women's rights advocate Salma al-Shehab speaks to a journalist in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in March 2014.   (Saudi state television via AP)

A Saudi doctoral student at Leeds University in Britain has been freed after seeing her 34-year sentence for her activity on Twitter in Saudi Arabia drastically reduced, a rights group said Monday. Salma al-Shehab, a mother of two, had been sentenced to 34 years in prison back in 2022 over her tweets, reports the AP. A London-based Saudi rights group, ALQST, announced her release. In January, ALQST and other groups said al-Shehab had seen her sentence reduced to four years in prison, with an additional four years suspended. "Her full freedom must now be granted, including the right to travel to complete her studies," the group said.

Saudi Arabia didn't immediately acknowledge her release, and Saudi officials didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from the AP. Al-Shehab was detained during a family vacation on Jan. 15, 2021, just days before she planned to return to the United Kingdom. She's a member of Saudi Arabia's Shiite Muslim minority, which has long complained of systematic discrimination in the Sunni-ruled kingdom. Judges accused al-Shehab of "disturbing public order" and "destabilizing the social fabric"—claims stemming solely from her social media activity, according to an official charge sheet. They alleged al-Shehab followed and retweeted dissident accounts on Twitter and "transmitted false rumors."

(More Saudi Arabia stories.)

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