UN removes Saudi dissident from blacklist

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UN removes Saudi dissident from blacklist

By RON DePASQUALEAssociated Press
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The U.N. Security Council committee monitoring sanctions against al-Qaida removed a London-based Saudi dissident from its blacklist Monday.
The committee chairman, Germany's U.N. Ambassador Peter Wittig, said it de-listed Saad Rashed Mohammed Al-Faqih and the Movement for Reform in Arabia, which he leads. Al-Faqih was removed after the committee failed to override a decision by the blacklist's ombudsman to remove him.
"The key question the Committee has to consider is whether there is sufficient information to provide a reasonable and credible basis for concluding that an individual, group, undertaking, or entity is associated with al-Qaida," Wittig said in a statement.
Al-Faqih, according to his website, was a professor of surgery at King Saud University in Riyadh until he was briefly jailed for opposition activities and left in 1993 for Britain. He did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said that while the U.K. supported delisting Al-Faqih, the U.S. opposed it.
The U.N. decision "doesn't change the fact that U.S. sanctions on him have been maintained," she said. "And today's action has no effect on the way we deal with him."
The U.N. blacklisted Al-Faqih soon after the U.S. Treasury Department did in December 2004. The Treasury Department alleged that Al-Faqih had "maintained associations with the al-Qaida network since the mid-1990s."
In December 2009, the Security Council established an independent ombudsman to deal with requests to get off the blacklist, gather information and report to the sanctions committee. A resolution adopted last year strengthened the role of the ombudsman, presently Canadian lawyer Kimberly Prost. If the ombudsman recommends delisting, the resolution says the individual or entity will be taken off the sanctions list in 60 days unless the sanctions committee agrees by consensus to maintain sanctions.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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