AI Report 2012: “In February, the Justice Minister announced that the Specialized Criminal Court in Riyadh had issued preliminary verdicts in 442 cases, involving 765 security suspects. In April, the Interior Ministry said that 5,831 security detainees had been released in recent years, including 184 since the start of 2011; that 5,080 security detainees had been questioned and referred for trial while 616 were still being questioned; that 1,931 others had been questioned and could be referred to the Specialized Criminal Court; and that 1,612 people had been convicted of ’terrorism offences’. In addition, 486 people convicted of security-related offences were said by the Interior Ministry to have been compensated for being detained beyond the expiry of their sentence.”
Graeme R. Newman: Crime and Punishment Around the World. 2010, ISBN 978-0-313-35133-4, S.357 (englisch, eingeschränkte Vorschau in der Google-Buchsuche [abgerufen am 20. Mai 2012]).
hrw.org
Christoph Wilcke: Human Rights and Saudi Arabia’s Counterterrorism Response. In: Human Rights Watch. 10. August 2009 (hrw.org [abgerufen am 13. Februar 2024]).
Timothy Spangler | Orange County Register: Timothy Spangler: Child rape case roils Saudis. In: Orange County Register. 15. Februar 2013, abgerufen am 13. Februar 2024 (amerikanisches Englisch).
Moralvorschriften: Frauen in Saudi-Arabien dürfen allein im Hotel übernachten. In: Der Spiegel. 21. Januar 2008, ISSN2195-1349 (spiegel.de [abgerufen am 13. Februar 2024]).
Saudi-Arabien: Männer rufen zu Gewalt gegen autofahrende Frauen auf. In: Der Spiegel. 25. Mai 2011, ISSN2195-1349 (spiegel.de [abgerufen am 13. Februar 2024]).
Moralvorschriften: Frauen in Saudi-Arabien dürfen allein im Hotel übernachten. In: Der Spiegel. 21. Januar 2008, ISSN2195-1349 (spiegel.de [abgerufen am 13. Februar 2024]).
Saudi-Arabien: Männer rufen zu Gewalt gegen autofahrende Frauen auf. In: Der Spiegel. 25. Mai 2011, ISSN2195-1349 (spiegel.de [abgerufen am 13. Februar 2024]).