Shia Youth Beaten in Makkah

Members of an Umra group were detained and beaten by the religious police in the Grand Mosque in Mecca in August 2007. Having just arrived from the holy city of Medina, the youths were spending time in worship and supplications in the mosque when they were detained by the religious police of the mosque. Eight male youths were taken to a police compound within the mosque where they were insulted and savagely beaten. The fact that the youths were British/American citizens and followers of the Shia school of thought led to this vile treatment. They were released after 12 hours of interrogation without food, water and medication.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6842874,00.html

Shiite Pilgrims Demand Torture Inquiry

LONDON (AP) - Eight British and American Shiite Muslims who said they were detained and tortured by religious police during a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia called Friday for compensation and a full inquiry.
Group members, some of Iraqi descent and aged between 16 and 26, said they were visiting the Kaaba, the cube-shaped shrine in the holy city of Mecca that pilgrims circle, when Saudi police interrupted them and called them infidels.
The police noticed the group was praying in the Shiite manner, which differs slightly from the Sunni style, the accusers said. Saudi Arabia's official strict Wahhabi version of Sunni Islam considers Shiites heretics.
Many in Saudi Arabia are particularly suspicious of Iraq's Shiites, believing they discriminate against the country's Sunni minority and are too closely linked to Shiite-majority Iran.
One of the eight is Amir Taqi, the 23-year-old son of Ridha Jawad Taqi, a senior Iraqi lawmaker in the country's biggest Shiite political party.
``We were handcuffed and savagely beaten with sticks, chairs, belts, shoes and police communication devices,'' Amir Taqi told a London news conference. He said the men were denied food, water and access to toilets.
The seven Britons and one American produced photographs of injuries they said police inflicted on them. Images included bruising and spots of blood on one group member's head and cuts and bleeding from another's arm.
The group did not provoke the police, Taqi said.
A senior Saudi security official denied that religious police assaulted a group of Iraqi Shiites on a pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia.
``What the media said is baseless; no assaults took place in the shrine,'' Col. Ghazi al-Usaymi said in a statement issued Thursday.
Despite Saudi suspicions of Shiites, an attack on Shiite pilgrims would be unusual. Hundreds of thousands of Shiites visit the holy city each year without suffering physical harassment.
In a statement to reporters, the group said it was detained for 14 hours from Sunday to Monday afternoon. Aside from requesting compensation from Saudi authorities, the group wants guarantees about the safety of pilgrims.
Sayed Mohammed Jawad Al-Qazwini, a 26-year-old American also of Iraqi origin, told The Associated Press that police taunted the group as cowards when they refused to respond to provocation.
``You'll be killed and thrown to the dogs, and no one will ever know where you are,'' Jawad quoted police as telling them after they were detained.
But Jawad said he did not believe the men were targeted due to their Iraqi connections.

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article2853826.ece
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSL1054770420070810
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6932127.stm
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/11/world/middleeast/11saudi.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,292927,00.html