Saudi Arabia’s Control and Anti-Corruption Authority arrests corrupt judge and accomplices

Saudi Arabia’s Control and Anti-Corruption Authority carried out an investigation into a judge on accusations of corruption. (SPA)
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Updated 11 April 2020
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Saudi Arabia’s Control and Anti-Corruption Authority arrests corrupt judge and accomplices

  • The judge was arrested and other defendants have all admitted to the charges

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Control and Anti-Corruption Authority announced on Saturday that it had investigated a judge at a public court in the Kingdom after it received information that the judge had been accepting bribes.

Results of investigations showed that the accusations were correct and he was arrested.

In addition to this, the probe showed that a third party engaged by the judge to receive the bribes, the judge’s brother who is an officer and has the rank of a colonel, several businessmen and a lawyer were all involved in the crimes of bribery, money laundering, seizing public money, exploitation of positions to influence and administrative misuse. 

The judge was arrested and the other defendants have all admitted to the charges against them and will be referred to the judiciary in due course. 

The authority added that the judge’s actions do not reflect the integrity and competence with which judges in the Kingdom carry out their duties.

The authority also said that a group of coronavirus curfew violators who tried to bribe police officers to let them off were also arrested.
They attacked police cars after their offers were refused and were investigated and held in custody. Their cases will be referred to the criminal court.


Scouts record 45,000 volunteer hours serving pilgrims at Grand Mosque in Ramadan

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Scouts record 45,000 volunteer hours serving pilgrims at Grand Mosque in Ramadan

  • Volunteers guide pilgrims, organize prayers areas, distribute water
  • 600 young men and women scouts will work until end of Ramadan

RIYADH: Volunteers participating in the Umrah service camp supervised by the Saudi Arabian Scouts Association at the Grand Mosque in Makkah have contributed over 45,000 hours during the first half of Ramadan.

Six-hundred young men and women scouts, representing various teams across the Kingdom, participated in the camp’s activities, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Thursday.

They helped to guide pilgrims, organize prayer areas, support security and service personnel, care for children, and provide water and fragrances in the Grand Mosque and its courtyards.

The scouts supported the General Authority for the Care of the Two Holy Mosques and the public security sectors.

Three-hundred scouts participated in guidance and orientation with 22,500 hours, while 180 scouts assisted with public security services for 13,500 hours.

Sixty scouts who participated in the organization of prayer areas recorded 4,500 volunteer hours.

Additionally, 30 scouts participated in the Little Pilgrim Initiative, which focuses on caring for the children of pilgrims while their parents perform Umrah, contributing 2,250 hours.

In support services, 15 scouts participated in the water distribution initiative, contributing 675 hours.

Another 15 scouts contributed to the fragrance distribution initiative in the corridors and courtyards of the Grand Mosque, achieving 1,125 hours.

Camp leader Ziyad Qadir said the services of the scouts would continue until the end of Ramadan. He said the camps develop a sense of social responsibility and national belonging among young people.