By Andrew Hammond
RIYADH - When Jamila al-Ukla's husband was taken by Saudi state security forces last month, she spent five days searching before finding him in prison, she says.
She checked hospitals and local police and called colleagues who worked in local human rights groups. When she tried to check his ransacked office on the campus of King Saud University a security guard removed her.
Ukla eventually learned that state security forces had incarcerated her husband, politics professor and political reform activist, in Uleisha prison in Riyadh.
Source: Reuters
RIYADH - When Jamila al-Ukla's husband was taken by Saudi state security forces last month, she spent five days searching before finding him in prison, she says.
She checked hospitals and local police and called colleagues who worked in local human rights groups. When she tried to check his ransacked office on the campus of King Saud University a security guard removed her.
Ukla eventually learned that state security forces had incarcerated her husband, politics professor and political reform activist, in Uleisha prison in Riyadh.
Source: Reuters