Religious officers will no longer be allowed to detain people, instead must report violators to police or drug squad officers. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
RIYADH
- Saudi Arabia has stripped its frequently criticised religious police
of their powers to arrest, urging them to act "kindly and gently" in
enforcing Islamic rules.
Under changes approved by the
Saudi cabinet, religious officers will no longer be allowed to detain
people and instead must report violators to police or drug squad
officers, the official Saudi Press Agency said, reporting the changes
late Tuesday.
Officers of the Haia force, also known as
the Mutawaa, must "carry out the duties of encouraging virtue and
forbidding vice by advising kindly and gently" under the new rules, it
reported.
"Neither the heads nor members of the Haia
are to stop or arrest or chase people or ask for their IDs or follow
them -- that is considered the jurisdiction of the police or the drug
unit," the regulations say.
Saudi Arabia's religious
police enforce the country's strict interpretation of Islamic law
including segregation of the sexes, ensuring that women cover themselves
from head-to-toe when in public.
Formally known as the
Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, its
members also patrol shops to make sure they are shuttered during prayers
five times daily.
Prior to the new regulations,
officers were allowed to arrest people using alcohol or drugs and
committing certain other offences including witchcraft.
Their
tactics have regularly been the subject of controversy, most recently
in February when members were arrested for allegedly assaulting a young
woman outside a Riyadh shopping mall, local media said at the time.
In
2013, religious policemen were arrested after their patrol car crashed
into another vehicle during a chase that left two men dead.
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Thursday, 14 April 2016
Saudi religious police ordered to act ‘kindly, gently’
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