Saudi Arabia to Execute Retired Teacher Over Tweets Sent to His 10 Followers Criticising the Government
By Edward Era Barbacena
Mohammad Alghamdi, a retired teacher in his mid 50s, was reportedly sentenced to death in Saudi Arabia for critiquing national leadership on social media—to his measly 10 Twitter followers. Saudi Arabia has scaled up its attack on social media users in an attempt to discourage criticism of the government.
Alghamdi, who is in his mid-50s and a father of seven, maintained just a handful of followers across two anonymous accounts on the social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter). Despite his limited online reach, he shared posts that criticized government corruption and other related issues.
Alghamdi, a father of seven living in Mecca, had gained just 10 followers between the two anonymous accounts he ran on X. According to Human Rights Watch, he used the social media site to rail against alleged government corruption, but was mostly resharing posts by more popular government critics.
Others have been sentenced to decades in prison for the same crime, but Alghamdi, who posted to Twitter and YouTube, appears to be the first person to get the death penalty. The father of seven living in Mecca frequently retweeted posts from popular critics of the Saudi regime, but tweeted his own disproval of its corruption, too, according to Human Rights Watch.
He ran two tiny anonymous Twitter accounts that collectively amassed just 10 followers, making Alghamdi’s punishment all the more shocking. His older brother, Saeed Alghamdi, said he believed the harsh sentence was actually meant to target him. Saeed is a renowned Islamic scholar and well-known critic of the Saudi government, with far more reach than his brother.
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