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Saudi police arrest citizen who helped non-Muslim journalist use path to Makkah
Saudi Arabia-Mecca/Pixabay

Police in the Saudi Arabia said that a Saudi citizen who allegedly helped a non-Muslim enter the holy city of Mecca has been arrested, after an online backlash against a journalist working for Israeli television.

The journalist, Gil Tamary of Israel’s Channel 13, posted on Twitter a video of himself sneaking into Mecca, Islam’s holiest city, in defiance of a ban on non-Muslims, The Guardian reported.

A police spokesperson said in comments reported by the official Saudi Press Agency on Friday (July 22) that Mecca regional police have “referred a citizen” to prosecutors for alleged complicity in “transferring and facilitating the entry of a (non-Muslim) journalist.”

SPA did not name the journalist but said he was an American citizen, whose case has also been referred to prosecutors “to take the necessary procedures against him in accordance with the applied laws”.

Despite growing behind-the-scenes business and security contacts, Saudi Arabia does not recognise Israel and did not join the 2020 US-brokered Abraham Accords that saw the Jewish state establish ties with two of the kingdom’s neighbours, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.

Saudi Arabia is a major religious destination with millions visiting Islam's two holy cities of Mecca and Medina annually to perform the hajj and umrah pilgrimages (Photo: Pixabay)

In his roughly 10-minute clip, Tamary visits Mount Arafat, where robed Muslim pilgrims gather to pray during the climax of the hajj pilgrimage each year.

He makes clear he knows that what he’s doing is outlawed but says he wanted to showcase “a place that is so important to our Muslim brothers and sisters”.

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Tamary’s justification, and subsequent apology, did little to quiet angry Saudi social media responses.

The Guardian noted that the controversy followed US president, Joe Biden’s, visit to both Israel and Saudi Arabia last week.

Source: theguardian