@_fachrurozi: Mikirin kamu ntar aja,tunggu motor ku kelar 🥰 #pitung5tp

PITUNG_5TP🍊
PITUNG_5TP🍊
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Wednesday 18 December 2024 03:27:02 GMT
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_massaldo
PITUNG ALANZA 🥀 :
mikirin de e pas iku gaya opo wae😭😭
2024-12-18 05:27:28
1
mas.doyo.22
𝗣𝗜𝗧𝗨𝗡𝗚 𝗔𝗜𝗦𝗛𝗧𝗘𝗥U💙 :
pangkon lampu belakang ho tek cb. opo gawan seakbor?
2024-12-19 21:36:16
0
hendra752972
ncep hendra :
ga selesai²
2024-12-18 04:53:12
0
pitungc700
Pitung c70 :
semangatt mas💪☺️
2024-12-18 04:34:42
0
muhammadafiq0184
kentung.wak :
podo wae mas nmbe di dandani eh ana meneh sng bdol☺️
2024-12-18 08:31:14
0
rndradikamaulna
𝖎𝖒𝖕𝖔𝖓𝖌-☆ :
follback mass
2025-01-15 13:10:08
0
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A former teacher who was sentenced to death by a Saudi court last year over social media posts from accounts with 10 followers is being held arbitrarily and should be released immediately, UN experts have found. The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention’s conclusion in the case of Mohammed al-Ghamdi, a retired teacher, comes a little over a month after his brother, Asaad al-Ghamdi, also a teacher, was sentenced to 20 years over his posts on X. Among their posts were ones critical of Saudi government policies - including the flagship economic programme Vision 2030 - unemployment, inflation, and mismanagement of resources. Some called for the release of political prisoners. Others mourned those who died in prison. Their brother, Saeed Nasser al-Ghamdi, a prominent religious scholar and Saudi Arabian opposition figure living in London, said on Friday that he welcomed the UN’s findings. “However, the most important thing remains to ensure its implementation by the Saudi government which has a history of defying international law,” Saeed Nasser al-Ghamdi said in a statement. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman acknowledged in an interview with Fox News last September that Mohammed al-Ghamdi had been a victim of “bad laws”, which he said should be changed. However, rights advocates quickly pointed out that the counterterrorism law under which Ghamdi was tried was part of sweeping reforms the crown prince instigated when he rose to power. Saudi Arabia told the working group that Mohammed al-Ghamdi was guilty of inciting sedition, spreading chaos, and disrupting public security. ✍️ MEE/Dania Akkad
A former teacher who was sentenced to death by a Saudi court last year over social media posts from accounts with 10 followers is being held arbitrarily and should be released immediately, UN experts have found. The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention’s conclusion in the case of Mohammed al-Ghamdi, a retired teacher, comes a little over a month after his brother, Asaad al-Ghamdi, also a teacher, was sentenced to 20 years over his posts on X. Among their posts were ones critical of Saudi government policies - including the flagship economic programme Vision 2030 - unemployment, inflation, and mismanagement of resources. Some called for the release of political prisoners. Others mourned those who died in prison. Their brother, Saeed Nasser al-Ghamdi, a prominent religious scholar and Saudi Arabian opposition figure living in London, said on Friday that he welcomed the UN’s findings. “However, the most important thing remains to ensure its implementation by the Saudi government which has a history of defying international law,” Saeed Nasser al-Ghamdi said in a statement. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman acknowledged in an interview with Fox News last September that Mohammed al-Ghamdi had been a victim of “bad laws”, which he said should be changed. However, rights advocates quickly pointed out that the counterterrorism law under which Ghamdi was tried was part of sweeping reforms the crown prince instigated when he rose to power. Saudi Arabia told the working group that Mohammed al-Ghamdi was guilty of inciting sedition, spreading chaos, and disrupting public security. ✍️ MEE/Dania Akkad

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