Saudi religious police issue rare apology for beating Briton

Man attacked in Riyadh supermarket after standing in women-only checkout aisle

A file image of Saudi members of the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, or religious police, attending a training course in Riyadh. Photograph: Ali Jarekji/Reuters.
A file image of Saudi members of the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, or religious police, attending a training course in Riyadh. Photograph: Ali Jarekji/Reuters.

The Saudi religious police have issued a rare apology for the beating by its personnel of a British man residing in the kingdom in a supermarket in Riyadh.

The Commission of the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice said it was re-assigning four of its staff to administrative duty after a video emerged over the weekend of the men in a confrontation with a foreign man.

The Briton, who has not been officially identified, was in a women-only checkout aisle at a supermarket in the conservative Sunni Muslim kingdom on Friday when the officers approached him, in a spat which devolved into an assault on the man and his Saudi wife.

“The commission apologises to the resident and his wife,” the body said in a statement, saying the men overstepped their authority in accosting the couple and not contacting a superior.

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Public mixing between the sexes is frowned upon in Saudi Arabia and Virtue and Vice personnel patrol public places to prevent it and other perceived violations of Islamic morality.

Reuters