Saudi activist Loujain al-Hathloul on Wednesday lost a court appeal against a prison sentence as well as restrictions including a five-year travel ban, her family said, following her provisional release from jail.
Hathloul, 31, best known for campaigning against a decades-long Saudi ban on female drivers, was detained in May 2018 with about a dozen other women activists — just weeks before the ban was lifted.
In late December, a court handed Hathloul a prison term of five years and eight months for terrorism-related crimes, but a partially suspended sentence — and time already served — paved the way for her early release last month.
Hathloul was released on probation and is barred from leaving Saudi Arabia for five years.
“The judge denied the appeal and confirmed the sentence to five years and eight months in prison, which includes three years of probation and five years of a travel ban, during which Loujain cannot leave Saudi Arabia at any time,” the activist’s family said in a statement.
Saudi authorities have not officially commented on her detention, trial, or release.
In one of her first public comments since her detention, Hathloul told foreign diplomats gathered outside Riyadh’s anti-terrorism court ahead of the hearing: “Let’s hope that the sentence has been changed or modified a little bit.”