Additional Name(s): علي حسن الفرج

Gender: Male

Perpetrator: Saudi Arabia

Ethnic Group: Arab

Religion or Belief: Muslim – Shi'a

Reports of Torture: No

Reports of Medical Neglect: No

Date of Detainment: June/29/2017

Current Status: Not Released

Religious Leader: No

Most Recent Type of Abuse: Detainment

Reason for Persecution: Attending a Religious Gathering or Meeting Children’s Rights Protesting Religious Freedom Conditions Religious Identity

Nature of Charges: Illegal Assembly Terrorism

Ali Hassan al-Faraj

Extra Bio Info:

Ali Hassan al-Faraj is detained for his religious identity and for protesting religious freedom conditions.

On June 29, 2017, authorities in Medina arrested al-Faraj in relation to his participation in protests against the state's treatment of Shi'a citizens in al-Qatif. Al-Faraj was 21 years old at the time of his arrest and accused of crimes that he allegedly committed when he was a minor. Authorities charged al-Faraj with several crimes, including “seeking to destabilize the social fabric by participating in protests and funeral processions,” and “chanting slogans hostile to the regime.” At least one of the charges dates back to when al-Faraj was 17 years old.

Prosecutors were originally pushing for al-Faraj to be executed; however, in February 2021, it was reported that prosecutors were now seeking a 10-year prison sentence for al-Faraj. The Specialized Criminal Court is trying al-Faraj.

Related Cases: Ali Mohammed Al BatiAhmed Abdul Wahid al-FarajMohammed Issam al-FarajMohammed Hussein Al Nimr

Additional Name(s): Mohammed Essam Al-Faraj, محمد عصام الفرج

Gender: Male

Perpetrator: Saudi Arabia

Ethnic Group: Arab

Religion or Belief: Muslim – Shi'a

Health Concerns: High blood pressure

Reports of Torture: Yes

Reports of Medical Neglect: No

Date of Detainment: June/29/2017

Current Status: Not Released

Religious Leader: No

Most Recent Type of Abuse: Imprisonment

Reason for Persecution: Attending a Religious Gathering or Meeting Children’s Rights Protesting Religious Freedom Conditions Religious Identity

Nature of Charges: Aid & Abetment Illegal Assembly Spreading Propaganda & False or Misleading Ideas, Information, or Materials Terrorism

Mohammed Issam al-Faraj

Extra Bio Info:

Mohammed Issam al-Faraj is imprisoned for his religious identity and for protesting religious freedom conditions.

On June 29, 2017, authorities in Medina arrested al-Faraj in relation to his participation in protests against the state's treatment of Shi'a citizens in al-Qatif. Al-Faraj was 15 years old at the time of his arrest and accused of crimes that he allegedly committed when he was younger. Authorities brought al-Faraj to Al Mabahith Prison, Dammam, placing him solitary confinement for two months and torturing him into signing a confession for crimes later brought against him. Al-Faraj was reportedly not allowed to access legal counsel during his detention.

Al-Faraj was charged with “forming a terrorist cell with the purpose of harming security guards with the intent to kill, monitoring police patrols and their movements at Al-Awamiyah police station and sending information to a wanted man, covering for this individual and not providing information concerning him to the authorities, participating in protests and funerals of persons allegedly killed by the State and chanting anti-State slogans, and storing and sending information potentially harmful to public security.” The charges related to al-Faraj’s participation in protests and funerals date back to when he was 9 years old.

Prosecutors were originally pushing for al-Faraj to be executed; however, in February 2021, it was reported that prosecutors were now seeking a 10-year prison sentence for al-Faraj.

In March 2021, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention released an opinion on al-Faraj's detention, calling for his immediate release.

In September 2022, it was reported that the Specialized Criminal Court had sentenced al-Faraj to 10 years in prison.

Al-Faraj suffers from high blood pressure.

Related Cases: Ali Mohammed Al BatiAhmed Abdul Wahid al-FarajAli Hassan al-FarajMohammed Hussein Al Nimr

Mar 8, 2022

This op-ed was originally published by Newsweek on March 8, 2022.

By USCIRF Commissioners Anurima Bhargava and Tony Perkins

Gulmira Imin is a Uyghur Muslim in China, former administrator of the Uyghur-language website Salkin and a participant in a 2009 demonstration protesting Uyghur migrant workers’ deaths.  She was charged with “splittism, leaking state secrets, and organizing an illegal demonstration,” and in 2010, sentenced to life in prison, where she has reportedly been tortured. Her sentence subsequently was reduced to almost 20 years. Her real “crime” is being a young leader of the Uyghur Muslim community, which the Chinese government has targeted in recent years, including by forcibly sterilizing Uyghur women.

The imprisonment and reported torture of Gulmira Imin, is one example of the genocide and crimes against humanity being perpetrated by the Chinese government.  And she is but one example of how women are being harassed and imprisoned, and subject to violence and abuse by state and non-state actors alike, as they lead the fight globally to protect—and to exercise—the freedom of religion or belief.  Women face distinctive and severe forms of religious persecution—including rape, abduction, forced marriages, forced conversions and forced renunciations of faith.

In Iran, government officials raided the house of human rights activist and author Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee.  During the raid, they found an unpublished story she wrote criticizing the official policy of stoning women to death for adultery. Since 2014, she has been detained, threatened with execution, imprisoned in Evin and other prisons, released on bail after serving 3 and a half years, rearrested in November 2020, and in April 2021, sentenced to more prison time. The Iranian government has long engaged in the severe repression of the religious freedom of women, whom the government targets, as it did with Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee, for simply not conforming to its reading of religious law. 

At the age of 14, Leah Sharibu was kidnapped in 2018 by the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP). She remains captive because she refuses to renounce her Christian faith. Leah Sharibu is among hundreds of girls and women who have been abducted and persecuted for their faith.

Gulmira Imin.  Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee.  Leah Sharibu.  These are names we know. Yet there are far too many names that we don’t know, including Yazidi women and girls who were abducted by ISIS and then forced to serve as sex slaves and to convert to Islam. In Pakistan, abduction, forced conversion to Islam, rape, and forced marriage threaten women, especially Hindu and Christian women and girls.  In India, inflammatory campaigns touting Hindu nationalism have targeted interfaith relationships, and coupled with the expansion of anti-conversion laws, have fueled unchecked violence against women and non-Hindus. Saudi Arabia’s religiously grounded guardianship system denies women the rights of legal adulthood.

Women and girls also face persecution from family and community in the name of religion—including forced marriages and conversions, sexual and domestic violence and abuse, enforced dress codes and other social control that prohibit women from going out in public, taking public transportation, getting an education and accessing health care. These affronts often take place in the home and out of sight, and usually remain unaddressed. 

At the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), we advocate for women who are targeted for their religious beliefs, identity, activity, or religious freedom advocacy, and also maintain a database, the FoRB Victims List, of such victims.  We call for the immediate and unconditional release of Gulmira Imin, Golrokh Ebrahimi Iraee and Leah Sharibu—among many other prisoners of conscience.  And we urge the U.S. government to use all available tools to work for the release of these three women and other religious prisoners of conscience, including coordinating these efforts with other like-minded governments and civil society groups. We also urge people of faith to pray for these victims and the many others who are targeted for their faith.   

On this International Women’s Day, we ask that you say the names of women targeted and imprisoned for exercising and advocating for freedom of religion and belief.  So we can all know their names. And continue the fight for our freedoms together.