Pilgrims accuse Saudi religious police, want trial
By Sylvia Westall
LONDON (Reuters) - A group of British and U.S. Shi'ite Muslims said on Friday the Saudi religious police they accuse of beating them in the holy city of Mecca should be put on trial abroad.
The eight male pilgrims, all of Iraqi descent, said they were beaten and detained overnight on Sunday by the Saudi Mutawa'a, or religious police, because of their nationalities and the fact they were holding Shi'ite-style prayers.
Saudi embassy officials were not immediately available for comment. Saudi-owned newspaper Asharq al-Awsat quoted Ghazi al-Usaimi, deputy police chief at Mecca's Grand Mosque, on Thursday as denying any truth to reports about the incident.
Tension is high in the region because of sectarian violence between Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims in Iraq. Saudi Arabia, which practices a strict form of Sunni Islam, is uncomfortable with the rise of a Shi'ite majority to power in Iraq.
Iraq's defeat of Saudi Arabia in the final of the Asian Cup soccer competition has heightened anti-Shi'ite feeling.
An Iraqi parliamentarian told Reuters earlier this week that sons of Iraqi politicians were among the group.
At a news conference in London, the group of Shi'ite pilgrims called on the religious police to apologize and pay compensation. They said those responsible should be handed over and tried for violating human rights.
"While in police custody we were handcuffed and savagely beaten with chairs, bats, sticks, shoes and police radio communication devices," 24-year-old pilgrim Amir Taki said. Continued...



