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Middle East Monitor Saudi arrests famous Quran reciter Abdullah Basfar Abdullah Ibn Ali Basfar, Saudi Arabian Quran reciter, also known as a Qari [image: social media] Abdullah Ibn Ali Basfar, Saudi Arabian Quran reciter, also known as a Qari [image: social media] September 5, 2020 at 1:24 pm facebook sharing button twitter sharing button reddit sharing button whatsapp sharing button sharethis sharing button Saudi authorities have recently arrested Sheikh Abdullah Basfar, one of the famous Quran reciters across the Islamic world, the Prisoners of Conscience revealed on Twitter on Friday. The Prisoners of Conscience Twitter account conveyed that the sheikh was arrested in August, without giving more details on how and where he was arrested. "We confirm the detention of Sheikh Dr Abdullah Basfar since August 2020," the Prisoners of Conscience account posted. Basfar is an associate professor at the department of Sharia and Islamic Studies at King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah. He is also the former Secretary-General of the World Book and Sunnah Organisation. The reports about the detention of Sheikh Basfar coincided with reports about the detention of Sheikh Saud Al-Funaisan, who was arrested in March. Al-Funaisan is a university professor and a former dean of the faculty of Sharia at Al-Imam University in Riyadh. Read: Saudi Arabia 'arrests' Makkah imam over talk on 'evil-doers' However, some hailed these detentions as part of the crackdown on extremism in the kingdom, based on the plan of the Saudi Crown Prince Mohamed Bin Salman to erase the religious identity of Saudi Arabia. But a massive number of Saudis expressed their anger over the detention, Rai Al Youm online newspaper revealed, quoting a Saudi citizen on Twitter: "The elite whom we necessarily need are in prisons." Another Saudi citizen's Twitter account reported by Rai Al Youm posted: "Our clerics are being detained arbitrarily, while the trivial people enjoy freedom and spread corruption in the country. It is an overt campaign to get rid of Islam and spread vice in the land of Haramin." Since 2017, when the crown prince took power, he has been cracking down on clerics, journalists, academics and cyber activists over their critical views on his manner of ruling the country and his plans to secularise it.
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