‘Jadidah Arar’ Border Crossing between Saudi Arabia, Iraq Revived

Saudi Arabian officials as the Arar border crossing with Iraq, 340 Kms south of Baghdad. Reuters
Saudi Arabian officials as the Arar border crossing with Iraq, 340 Kms south of Baghdad. Reuters
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‘Jadidah Arar’ Border Crossing between Saudi Arabia, Iraq Revived

Saudi Arabian officials as the Arar border crossing with Iraq, 340 Kms south of Baghdad. Reuters
Saudi Arabian officials as the Arar border crossing with Iraq, 340 Kms south of Baghdad. Reuters

Saudis and Iraqis hope that al-Jadidah Arar crossing on Saudi Arabia's border with Iraq, which had been closed for more than 27 years, would become a vital transportation route while a bright future in relations seems to be shaping.

Saudi Arabia’s Chargé D’affaires in Baghdad Abdulaziz al-Shammari stressed that the opening of Jadidah Arar border crossing after all these years sends a great message to the peoples of the two countries that they need to support each other and unite.

“We are neighbors, and there is a great history, Arabism and blood between us. The next stage will be special in the history of the two countries’ relations,” Shammari said.

Asharq Al-Awsat has toured the area and noticed the great efforts exerted by all Saudi government agencies (such as border guards, passport control, the customs and the Ministry of Health), especially in welcoming Iraqi pilgrims through the crossing.

Jadidah Arar receives daily between 48 and 50 buses, carrying around 1,200 Iraqi pilgrims, according to officials in the Saudi General Directorate of Passports who also confirmed that these buses first pass through an inspection to check the pilgrims’ visas.

The procedure takes around two minutes for every bus before heading to the main office to complete the rest of the procedures, said one of the directorate’s employees.

Moreover, Saudi authorities have established a center for medical services at the crossing to serve Iraqi pilgrims and a hospital with a capacity of 50 beds with a medical staff, and developed equipment to receive emergency cases. Pilgrims are also given vaccines for fever and some chronic diseases, and many medical awareness publications are distributed to them.

Notably, many Iraqi pilgrims have benefited from these medical services, especially the elderly who suffer from chronic diseases and receive free medications.

Iraqi pilgrim Idriss Mohammed, 55, told Asharq Al-Awsat that Saudis have “provided us with everything we need; air-conditioned buildings, appliances, medicines and even food. We are brothers and our blood is one, and they are indeed Custodians of the two Holy Mosques.”

After the pilgrims finish the procedures of passports and customs control, buses go to the Ministry of Hajj, the last point before entering the city of Arar, where they are received and provided with ready meals prepared especially for them in air-conditioned tents with the help of volunteering Saudi scouts.

According to Iraqi Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Rushdi Al-Ani, Jadidah Arar border crossing will operate permanently from the two sides after this year’s Hajj season.

“The political decision has been taken regarding the borders, and the procedural and technical arrangements regarding the infrastructure and security issues will be handled soon. Jadidah Arar crossing will be opened after the end of the Hajj season,” the Iraqi ambassador confirmed.



UAE: Life Sentences for 24 Defendants in the ‘Justice and Dignity’ Case

The United Arab Emirates’ Federal Supreme Court (WAM)
The United Arab Emirates’ Federal Supreme Court (WAM)
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UAE: Life Sentences for 24 Defendants in the ‘Justice and Dignity’ Case

The United Arab Emirates’ Federal Supreme Court (WAM)
The United Arab Emirates’ Federal Supreme Court (WAM)

The United Arab Emirates’ Federal Supreme Court has issued a ruling partially overturning a previous verdict in the case known as the “Justice and Dignity Terrorist Organization,” sentencing 24 defendants to life imprisonment after they were found guilty of collaborating with the group and funding the “Al Islah Terrorist Organization.”

The court also ordered the confiscation of funds and tools seized in connection with both crimes.

The court delivered its decision during a session held on Thursday, June 26, following the partial acceptance of an appeal filed by the Attorney General, Counselor Dr. Hamad Al Shamsi. The appeal contested the ruling of the Abu Dhabi Federal Court of Appeal – State Security Chamber, which had dismissed the criminal case on the grounds that the defendants had already been tried in the matter.

In his appeal, the Attorney General argued that the contested ruling was flawed, as it failed to recognize the distinct nature of the crimes of financing and collaborating with the terrorist organization as stipulated under Federal Law No. (1) of 2004. He noted that these charges had not been included in the earlier 2012 case, in which the defendants were convicted solely of establishing and managing the “Al Islah Organization,” in accordance with the Penal Code.

In its reasoning, the Federal Supreme Court emphasized that the acts attributed to the defendants in the current case are different from those previously adjudicated. The court stated that they cannot be considered a single act under multiple legal descriptions, as the cause and subject of each are separate. It underlined that the criminal conduct at the heart of the new charges is distinct and carries a harsher penalty prescribed by law, thereby justifying a retrial on these offenses.

As a result of this ruling, the number of convicted individuals in what is regarded as one of the country’s largest national security cases has risen to 83 out of 84 defendants referred to trial.

According to the Emirates News Agency (WAM), the State Security Chamber of the Abu Dhabi Federal Court of Appeal had previously convicted 53 defendants, who were leaders and members of the terrorist Muslim Brotherhood organization, along with six affiliated companies. Sentences in that judgment ranged from life imprisonment to temporary prison terms, as well as fines of up to 20 million dirhams. One defendant was acquitted.

WAM confirmed that this ruling reflects the UAE’s approach in confronting terrorist organizations and their financing, underscoring the independence of the judiciary and its strict application of the law in matters that threaten the security and stability of the state.