"Raif Badawi is not a criminal. He is a writer and a free thinker"

"Free-thinking Arabs are used to concealing their ideas to get them through," Ensaf Haidar said, quoting her husband during the ceremony in Strasbourg. "Free and enlightened ideas are considered blasphemous in the ideology adopted by Arab societies, in which every free thought is decadence and a diversion from the true path."

"Raif is not a criminal," she said. "He is a writer and a free thinker: that is all. Raif Badawi’s crime is being a free voice in a country which does not accept anything other than a single opinion and a single thought." She now lives in exile in Canada with their children.

She continued: "He is just a thinker who refused to be part of the herd following clerics living outside of time and governing by injust and tyrannical laws." Haidar thanked the European Parliament for the award: "Awarding the Sakharov Prize to Raif Badawi is historic. It is, Mr President, an act of bravery by you and by all those who voted for Raif."

"A symbol and an inspiration"

"Badawi has become a symbol and an inspiration for all those fighting for fundamental rights in the region and beyond," said EP President Martin Schulz during the ceremony. "Despite great risk, as a blogger he has bravely endeavoured to foster free thought and exercised his right to freedom of expression filling a vacuum left by the lack of a free press in his country."

Schulz called on King Salman of Saudi Arabia to pardon the blogger immediately and release him unconditionally. He urged Saudi authorities "to put an end to the systematic crackdown on peaceful expression", referring to people such as Waleed Abu al-Khair, Abdulkarim Al-Khodr, Ashraf Fayadh and Ali Mohammed al-Nimr. He was warmly applauded when he called for the release of Mohammed al-Nimr who was sentenced to death. The EP President reminded that the country had been elected to the UN Human Rights Council.

"We are prepared for dialogue on human rights" but "no terror, no inhumane penal system will prevent us from fighting for human rights," Schulz told Haidar. "No security argument, no weapons deal or oil money may deter us."

Schulz also welcomed representatives from the 2015 Sakharov Prize finalist present in the public: Maria-Alejandra Aristeguieta-Alvarez representing the Democratic Opposition of Venezuela and Olga Shorina, the Executive Director of the Boris Nemtsov Foundation for Freedom in Germany .

Badawi: censored, jailed, flogged. But not silenced.





Badawi is a blogger and an advocate of freedom of thought and expression who was sentenced to ten years in prison, 1,000 lashes and a hefty fine for hosting online posts that were considered blasphemous by Saudi authorities on his website promoting a social, political and religious debate.

His first series of public lashes in January 2015 provoked international outcry and also sparked concerns about his health, which so far have prevented further floggings, but Badawi still remains in prison and has recently been placed in isolation.

Unfortunately Badawi is not the first Sakharov laureate unable to receive the prize in person the same year. Among many others, Aung San Suu Kyi was only able to receive the prize in person 23 years later after being awarded the Sakharov Prize.

Representatives from the 2015 Sakharov Prize finalists were also present in the public: Maria-Alejandra Aristeguieta-Alvarez representing the Democratic Opposition of Venezuela and Olga Shorina, the executive director of the Boris Nemtsov Foundation for Freedom in Germany .

Watch the recording of the ceremony on our website or follow the debate on social media using the hashtags #SakharovPrize and #FreeRaif. And learn more in our top story.