Tuesday, 29 Apr 2014 09:22 AM
“We will become victorious with faith in God. Good luck, you who have honored us by raising the flags of freedom. Your sisters, Sahar and Jawahir,” the princess concluded.
In addition to being confined to living in the king’s palace, Sahar and her sisters have been prohibited from marrying any members of the royal family.
In the video, Sahar mentions Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, a critic of the Saudia Arabian government who has been imprisoned since 2012, DigitalJournal.com reported.
Earlier in the month, Sahar told the New York Post in a telephone interview that she and her sisters “are cut off and isolated and alone.”
“We are hostages. No one can come see us, and we can’t go see anyone,” Sahar said. “Our father is responsible and his sons, our half-brothers, are both culprits in this tragedy.”
Sahar’s mother, Alanoud Al Fayez – who is currently living in London, told the New York Post that her daughters are victims of the same oppressive Saudi Arabian regime which she suffered under until her former husband divorced her in the 1980s after she gave birth to four daughters and no sons.
“After I was forced to marry him, Abdullah would come to my room as a visitor for a few hours every now and then, and then he’d go to his other wives, so you don’t even fight, you don’t even matter,” Al Fayez told the New York Post.
“Really, he had divorced me a number of times and he’d abuse me, beat me and had me beaten by guards,” Al Fayez continued. “And the more I took the abuse, the more I was abused.”
Al Fayez said she relocated to the West so that she could “tell the world about the abuses of women in Saudi Arabia.”
King Abdullah, who is said to be worth an estimated $15 billion, has had 30 wives with whom he’s fathered more than 40 children, the New York Post noted.