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News ID: 99143
Publish Date : 22 January 2022 - 21:49

Saudi Activists Slam bin Salman Projects for Displacing Jeddah Resident

RIYADH (Dispatches) – Saudi activists have taken to social media to condemn the displacement of the residents of several areas across Jeddah with the aim of implementing the projects of the so-called Saudi Vision 2030, which was launched by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in 2016, a report says.
Lebanon’s al-Mayadeen television network said in a report that the activists, over the past days, slammed the Saudi authorities for destroying the entire residential neighborhoods in Jeddah Province, and denounced the displacement of the residents without giving them a deadline to find alternative homes.
The demolitions come as the crown prince last month launched a new investment project dubbed “Jeddah Central Project,” which will include four landmarks: an opera house, museum, sports stadium, and oceanarium, as part of the implementation of Vision 2030.
According to al-Mayadeen, the social media activists said “a humanitarian, social and economic catastrophe will affect at least one million people” as the authorities in Jeddah gave some of the residents 48 hours, and gave others only 24 hours to leave their homes, while others were ordered to immediately evacuate their homes.
The activists added that the authorities “shut off water, electricity and other services before giving the warning,” noting that the compensations given to some of the owners are less than one third of the value of their homes.
Yahia al-Hadid, a human rights defender and the chairman of GIDHR, censured in a tweet the Saudi government for destroying the residents’ homes, “without any consideration of their humanitarian situation.”
The citizens of the oil-rich country “live below the poverty line and are being humiliated, despite the oil wealth that have been scattered over the seasons of entertainment.”
The port city of Jeddah lies along the Red Sea. It is considered Saudi Arabia’s tourism and economic capital.
Omar Abdulaziz, a member of the National Assembly Party (NAAS) – a Saudi opposition party whose members are exiles, noted that “Those affected by the development, and the removal of buildings and homes are retirees, former soldiers and small earners.”
On a Twitter space, Abdulaziz also denounced the Saudi authorities for failing to create alternative housing units for the displaced.
Abdullah al-Awda, the secretary general of the NAAS, also decried the demolitions as “forced displacement.”
He said the displacements “have no definite fate,” adding that no definite compensation amount or new place have been identified for the displaced, adding that the displaced people have also been stripped from “their right to reject or appeal.”
Meanwhile, Hanan al-Utaybi, a social media activist, said in a tweet “The Saudi authority behaves with the nation like bandits, as homes are being destroyed and lands are being seized.”
The activist Alyaa Abu Tayeh al-Hawiti also slammed the “greed” of Bin Salman, referring to the forced displacement of the members of al- Huwaitat tribe for the sake of the establishment of Neom -- a planned city in northwestern Saudi Arabia, and the murder of a citizen identified as Abdulrahim al-Hawiti who was condemning the regime’s moves.