When the US and Israel
decided to wage war against Iran, the Gulf States were caught
unawares. As Iran launched unprecedented attacks on its neighbours, a
period of regional stability and economic security came an end. For
Saudi Arabia, currently undergoing a major economic and social
transformation, the war could not have come at a worse time.
👹
All Antichrist Roads Lead to Mecca: F1 + Trump + Palan'thiel + JLO
+The Mysterious Glowing Orb (Kaaba)
🚗 The Bahrain GP
was scheduled for April 12, with the Saudi Arabian race set for April
19, but both events were canceled due to the ongoing conflict in the
Middle East involving Iran.
The Time Purposefully
Chosen for F1 Races in Antichrist Arabia Happens to be Easter. Just
like 2025 and 2017.
The 2025 Saudi Arabian
Grand Prix also brought a special twist—it took place on Easter
Sunday, just as it did EIGHT YEARS ago in Bahrain when
Sebastian Vettel claimed a memorable victory for Ferrari, celebrated
with a legendary team radio message.
The last time
F1 raced on Easter a Ferrari driver starting from the 2nd row won the
race (Sebastian Vettel Bahrain 2017) . The 2017 Bahrain Grand Prix
was a Formula One motor race that took place on 16 April 2017 at the
Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, Antichrist Bahrain.
♰ The 2025
Saudi Arabian Grand Prix took place on Easter Sunday.
And Jenny was There
Promoting The ORB (Kaaba)
♰ Easter
Sunday, April 16, 2017 – F1 Bahrain Grand Prix 2017
🛑
Walid Shoebat: Mystery Babylon Saudi Barbaria Destroyed: Good Bye, to
Bad Rubbish!
At least 65
Ethiopian migrants are at imminent risk of execution in Saudi Arabia
for drug-related offenses.
At least 65
Ethiopian migrants are at imminent risk of execution in Saudi Arabia
for drug-related offenses, Human Rights Watch said today. Saudi
authorities executed three others on April 21, 2026.
“Saudi
Arabia’s willingness to execute foreign migrants for nonviolent
offences following trials that denied them basic due process reflects
a profound disregard for their rights and lives,” said Nadia
Hardman, senior refugee and migrant rights researcher at Human Rights
Watch. “Saudi Arabia’s partners should urgently intervene before
it is too late.”
Human Rights
Watch interviewed three informed sources about the cases of three men
held in the Khamis Mushait detention facility in the Asir region of
Saudi Arabia. The sources said that all three explained they were
refugees, having fled the 2020-2022 armed conflict in Ethiopia’s
northern Tigray region, where the humanitarian situation remains
dire.
The sources
said that the three men used the dangerous migration route across the
Gulf of Aden, through Yemen, and into Saudi Arabia to seek work. They
said the men felt compelled to carry khat, a mild stimulant plant
native to parts of East Africa, to make money for the journey and to
survive. In at least one case, the sources said, a smuggler forced a
man to carry the plant from Yemen into Saudi Arabia as a condition of
facilitating his journey.
Cathinone, the
stimulant in khat, is banned in Saudi Arabia but legally permissible
and culturally consumed in parts of Ethiopia, as well as in Yemen.
The sources said that none of the men knew that carrying khat into
and within Saudi Arabia was illegal.
The sources
said that Saudi security authorities intercepted and arrested the
three men between 2023 and 2024, in the Abaha region, while they were
working, and transferred them to various detention facilities, and
finally to Khamis Mushait. The sources indicated the men had two or
three extremely brief group court hearings, some by video link. The
men had no legal representation or translators, and none were told
the charges against them.
The sources
said that security officials beat the men during the hearings and
forced them to sign documents they did not understand. A translator
appeared only in the final court hearing, solely to inform them that
they had been found guilty of drug smuggling and were being sentenced
to death. The sources quoted the judge as saying. “You will be an
example to others.”
The men have
been held inside Khamis Mushait for over two years with no
opportunity to appeal. They have no set execution date, but they are
among approximately 65 other Ethiopian men inside their cell all
sentenced to death for drug-related offenses, as well as Saudi men
held for murder and other serious crimes. The sources indicated the
men believe hundreds of other Ethiopians are in other cells. Media
have reported that over 200 Ethiopian men are awaiting the death
penalty in Khamis Mushait. Human Rights Watch cannot verify this
number.
On April 21,
informed sources said, Saudi prison guards took three fellow
detainees from their cell and told them they were going to a court
hearing. Prison guards later told the remaining detainees that the
three men had been executed, and they should inform their family
members, creating panic among the others. The detainees have not
received any visitors since the start of their detention and have not
had any communication with Ethiopian consular officials.
The informed
sources quoted one man as saying: “Last week, three of our friends
were killed, maybe today or the day after tomorrow they [Saudi
security officials] can kill me. Please help us.”
On April 21,
the Ministry of Interior issued a statement announcing the executions
of three Ethiopian nationals for “participating in smuggling
hashish” into Saudi Arabia.
Saudi
authorities have twice set a new record for the highest number of
executions in one year since monitoring began, with 345 executions in
2024 and 356 in 2025. Executions of foreign nationals for nonlethal
drug crimes drove the surge in executions in 2025.
Saudi Arabia
has executed more than 2,000 people since King Salman bin Abdulaziz
took the throne on January 23, 2015, and appointed his son Mohammed
bin Salman crown prince on June 21, 2017. Despite a 2018 pledge by
the crown prince to significantly curtail the use of the death
penalty, executions have accelerated, including the execution of
child defendants, disproportionate executions of foreign nationals,
and politically motivated executions of people exercising their right
to freedom of expression.
Human Rights
Watch opposes the death penalty in all circumstances because of its
inherent cruelty. Saudi Arabia’s use of the death penalty is
contrary to international human rights law, which upholds every human
being’s “inherent right to life” and limits the death penalty
to “the most serious crimes,” typically crimes resulting in death
or serious bodily harm.
In 2025,
nonlethal drug-related offenses account for approximately 68 percent
of the total executions. The United Nations Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention condemned Saudi Arabia’s practice, finding that
executions for drug-related offences are incompatible with
international human rights law and fall outside the scope of the
“most serious crimes.” The working group urged Saudi authorities
to reinstate a moratorium and emphasized that imposing the death
penalty for such offenses constitutes a clear violation of
international legal standards.
Hundreds of
thousands of Ethiopians live and work in Saudi Arabia. While many
migrate for economic reasons, many have fled serious human rights
abuses by their government, including during the recent, brutal armed
conflict in northern Ethiopia. Human Rights Watch has for years
documented a wide range of human rights abuses against migrants
taking the same route.
The detention
of migrants in deplorable facilities in Saudi Arabia is a
longstanding problem which Human Rights Watch has found amounts to
inhuman and degrading treatment. In 2023, Human Rights Watch found
that Saudi border guards had killed at least hundreds of Ethiopian
migrants and asylum seekers who tried to cross the Yemen-Saudi
border, which, if committed as part of a Saudi government policy to
murder migrants, would be a crime against humanity.
Saudi Arabia
should immediately cancel the death penalty for Ethiopian migrants
and review all sentences in line with Saudi Arabia’s international
obligations, including the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child,
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the UN
Convention against Torture.
The Ethiopian
Foreign Affairs Ministry and its representatives in Saudi Arabia
should urgently intervene with their Saudi counterparts and at a
minimum ensure that their nationals receive immediate consular
assistance. Saudi Arabia should ratify the 1951 Refugee Convention
and establish asylum procedures consistent with international
standard.
Concerned
governments should use their leverage to press Saudi Arabia to
abolish the death penalty or, at the very least, to reinstate a
moratorium on executions for drug-related offences.
“Saudi
Arabia’s extensive use of the death penalty is intertwined with
fundamental and systemic violations of defendants’ rights to due
process and a fair trial,” Hardman said. “The death sentences
should be commuted and the death penalty abolished.”
😈
Babylon Saudi Barbaria Border
Guards Accused of Mass Killings of Christian Ethiopian Refugees
🛑 Darling of the West,
Babylon Saudi Barbaria Massacred 700 Ethiopian Christian Immigrants
🛑 US,
Germany Trained Saudi Troops Responsible For Mass Slaughter of
Ethiopian Christians. US Knew of Saudi Forces Killing Ethiopian
Migrants, But Kept Quiet — Report
💭
Senator Chuck Grassley writes on
X: “Very proud of my immigrant granddaughter in law Tsehay a NEW
American citizen after growing up in Ethiopia”
Senate
President pro tempore Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) "I am very proud
of Tsehay who is the wife of my grandson. She is a new American
citizen after growing up in Ethiopia."
Tsehay,
34, is the mother of his grandchildren Nathaniel and Skyler, and says
the citizenship test was not easy. She had to study hard and there
was a long wait. At this point she probably knows more about American
civics and the Constitution than the average U.S. college graduate.
Tsehay
says "Being a U.S. citizen is a badge of honor, and I will wear
it with pride."
😊 Here
are some of the many positive comments from Senator Chuck Grassley's
X (formerly Twitter) account:
1.
Congratulations and welcome to the United States of America!!
2.
She’s absolutely beautiful. Congrats to your granddaughter in law,
Grassley. Always happy to hear good news on a Friday. Enjoy your
weekend.
3.
Congratulations to Tsehay! I was born in what was then Ethiopia to
American military parents at Kagnew Station. The city of my birth,
Asmara, is now in Eritrea. I love the Ethiopian people!
4.
This photo is amazing, give us a chance to cheer a little more!😂
5.
She's an example of how to become an American citizen legally.
6.
At this point she knows more about American civics than the average
college graduate in the US. Welcome aboard! Do good work.
7.
What a gorgeous citizen
8.
She’s so pretty, Chuck. Huge Congrats, Tsehay!
9.
Love the people and coffee of Ethiopia, lived there many years.
10.
Congratulations, I'm a naturalized US citizen too.. That's why I
love this country.
11.
That's the right way to come to America, doing it the right way.
Congratulations to your daughter on her Naturalization.
Bluntly,
racism is rising. So is vile antisemitism. It's spreading and rising
online, and it's only a matter of time until it manifests in the
open. Racism is a Demonic Possession. The sources of Racism are
mainly Edomites and Ishmaelites. With their primitive envy and
hatred, they even attempt to banish Angels.
😈 Here are some of the
many demonic and racist comments on Africa-born Elon Musk's X
(formerly Twitter) platform:
1.
That's the right way to come to America, doing it the right way.
Congratulations to your daughter on her Naturalization.
2.
No. She has to go back.
3.
She will be deported.
4.
Send her back. Sorry your grandson is a race-mixing traitor.
5.
Yuck Here's how many Ethiopians we need in America: zero.
6.
Your grandson married an Ethiopian and you think her being a citizen
is a good thing?
7.
I'm sorry for your loss! Broken branch. Ancestor cry.
8.
How are you not embarrassed about all of this.
9.
Why are you bringing more of them here.
10.
Why didn't she stay in Ethiopia? Why do they only achieve success in
White countries?
11.
Make America Ethiopia? -modern RINO establishment.
12.
Ethiopian Americans have to go back.
13.
She is gonna be denaturalized and sent back within 30 years I hope
you get to see it.
14.
Congratulations on your genetic erasure and paper American relative.
15.
She’s not American. Never will be.
16.
No offense Mr Grassley but we don’t need one more African in this
country. We’re exhausted with them all. Sorry not sorry.
17.
Your grandson has poisoned the family tree, the white european
bloodline ends with them. I would be ashamed if I were you.
18.
Just what my country needs. Another Third Worlder.
19.
I’m voting for anyone in 2028 willing to deport her. All Non-White
Immigrants must be deported
😔 Comments
criticizing these racist comments:
1.
Look at the comments, Chuck! The modern Republican Party is not on
your side.
2.
Bunch of Americans in these comments inadvertently making a case for
why we are better off having more immigrants.
3.
White people whom ancestors came and stole lands from natives in
America are busy crying under this post… the fact remains she is
more American than most of them.
4.
Got to love the retarded lefty comments on this post. These people
are insufferable and incurable.
5.
I’m shocked, just shocked I tell you that your MAGA supporters are
throwing hate filled racist replies on this post. 🙄
6.
Speak out on the Senate Floor about this when you get back to work.
7.
Congrats but Chuck, there’s a wing of your party that will never
view her as an American.
8.
They are attacking YOUR family now. Do something about it.
9.
Congrats! The liberal tears are flowin' hard in the comments! LOL!
Welcome to all of our new American CITIZENS!