Pakistani expat arrested for harassing minor in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabian authorities have apprehended a Pakistani expatriate on serious charges involving the harassment of a minor, marking another enforcement of the Kingdom’s stringent anti-harassment legislation. The arrest of Khursheed Muhammad Nazir was executed through a coordinated operation between Najran Region Police and the General Directorate of Community Security and Combating Human Trafficking.

The Ministry of Interior confirmed that formal legal proceedings have been initiated against the suspect, who has been formally transferred to the Public Prosecution for further judicial processing. This case highlights Saudi Arabia’s rigorous application of its 2018 Anti-Harassment Law (Royal Decree No. M/96), which mandates severe punishments for such offenses.

Under Saudi jurisprudence, standard harassment violations carry penalties of up to two years imprisonment and/or fines reaching 100,000 riyals. However, the legal framework imposes significantly heightened sanctions when the victim is a child, with potential sentences extending to five years incarceration and financial penalties up to 300,000 riyals.

The enhanced penalty structure also applies under multiple aggravating circumstances, including cases involving repeat offenses, victims with special needs, perpetrators in positions of authority, incidents occurring in educational or workplace environments, same-sex harassment, crimes committed against unconscious victims, and offenses during times of crisis or disaster.