Justin Bieber’s Saudi Arabia Performance Slammed by Human Rights Foundation

Justin Bieber’s Saudi Arabia Performance Slammed by Human Rights Foundation

The chairman and CEO of the Human Rights Foundation are calling for Justin Bieber to cancel a scheduled performance in Saudi Arabia “as a symbol of solidarity with the ongoing suffering of the Saudi people.”

In a letter dated Nov. 2 and shared with Bieber’s representatives, the nonprofit’s chairman, Garry Kasparov, and CEO, Thor Halvorssen, take issue with the “Stay” singer’s reported performance at the Formula One Saudi Arabian Grand Prix 2021 on Dec. 5.

The Formula One event will also feature performances from A$AP Rocky, Jason Derulo, Tiesto and David Guetta, and HRF says that it also sent letters to these performers as well as Egyptian singer Mohamed Hamaki about performing in the event. (The Hollywood Reporter has reached out to HRF for additional comment.)

“We are writing to urgently inform you of the human rights crisis in Saudi Arabia; to explain the role that the regime of MBS [Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman] has played in violating the rights of tens of millions of Saudis; to ask that you consider the unfortunate implications of your engagement with the brutal dictatorship of MBS; and to respectfully request that, in light of your status as a global personality, you take this opportunity to positively influence human rights policy in Saudi Arabia by canceling your appearance, as a symbol of solidarity with the ongoing suffering of the Saudi people,” Kasparov and Halvorssen write.

The Hollywood Reporter reached out to Bieber’s representatives for comment, as well as the representatives for A$AP Rocky, Derulo, Tiesto and Guetta.

In the letter, the HRF leaders criticize the current regime’s treatment of dissidents and members of the LGBTQ+ community, its track record on individual rights, its restriction of the media, and imprisonment of women’s rights activists, among other issues. They note that Reporters Without Borders ranked Saudi Arabia 170 out of 180 countries in its 2021 World Press Freedom Index.

The letter also mentions that Halvorssen and the Human Rights Foundation produced The Dissident, Bryan Fogel’s 2020 documentary exploring the death of Washington Post writer Jamal Khashoggi, in which the Saudi royal family was infamously implicated.

A key argument of the letter is that Saudi Arabia’s monarchy is currently using entertainment and sports ventures to distract from abuses of power, and that Bieber’s statements in support of various social-justice causes are at odds with the planned performance. “The Saudi regime is happy to pay large sums to international celebrities to give the Kingdom a veneer of respectability, as long as the human rights violations occurring within Saudi Arabia are never mentioned,” the authors write.

This article originally appeared in THR.com.

 
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