American vows to stay in Jeddah with kids

By WND Staff

Although an American woman holed up in the U.S. Consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, since Sunday has, under coercion, signed a document giving up custody of her two young children, she now declares she will not leave the kingdom without her kids.

“I will never leave my children here to suffer the same horrible life that I had to endure,” Sarah Saga said on the Fox News Channel today.

The latest revelation comes after a whirlwind of reports in the media, some saying the woman will in fact leave without her two children.

As WorldNetDaily reported, Debbie Dornier appeared on Fox News Channel’s “Day Side” for the second straight day yesterday to update viewers on the gripping story she told Wednesday about her daughter, Saga, a 23-year-old American who was kidnapped by her father 18 years ago and taken to the kingdom. She has been unable to leave the country since then.

As WND reported, Saga eventually was married off to a Saudi and bore her own children. On Sunday, the woman, who claims to have been abused by her father, stepmother and husband, sought refuge in the U.S. Consulate. She is pleading with U.S. officials to help her and her children, age 3 and 5, travel to America. Saga had been told if she leaves, however, her Saudi-born children must stay in the kingdom. The U.S. considers the children Americans, but the Saudis do not recognize dual citizenship.

According to Dornier, her daughter was visited in her room at the consulate by three Saudi foreign-affairs officials and two U.S. officials who presented her with a document granting her the freedom to leave the country providing her children remained behind.

“Basically, they talked to her and talked to her and talked to her until she signed [the paper],” Dornier said. “The paper says she will release custody of her kids, leave them behind and go.”

Dornier said the officials told Saga her children would be left with her Saudi aunt, but Dornier says the aunt would be “helpless to do anything” to prevent the kids from going back with their Saudi father. The children’s grandmother says she fears for their safety if that were to happen.

Expressing her anger with the U.S. government, Dornier said, “Our government wrote the paper that she had to sign. … She didn’t have a lawyer. She really didn’t have one person on her side. … In essence, they put a gun to her head [to get her to sign.]”

Terri Schultz, a reporter for Fox News Channel, however, said the State Department version of what happened is quite different from Dornier’s.

“The State Department told me this morning that they didn’t prepare this paper that Sarah apparently has signed, but that the Saudis prepared it,” Schultz said. She also said U.S. officials claim Saga was not “pressured” into signing the document.

Furthermore, Schultz says the government does not consider the document to be legally binding. “That means that they say Sarah can change her mind at any moment and she’s welcome to remain in the consulate with her children, and they will … continue to help her, in their words, in any way that they can.”

Dornier was shocked by Schultz’s report, saying the officials she spoke to didn’t address whether or not the document is legally binding.

A State Department official spoke to reporters about Saga yesterday.

“We understand that this morning Sarah decided that she would leave Saudi Arabia and that her children would remain in that country in the custody of her husband’s family,” said Edward Vazquez, a spokesman for the State Department’s Bureau of Consular Affairs.

“Our understanding is that they will be turned over to an aunt whom Sarah trusts,” he told reporters, according to Reuters.

The latest report, however, written about in a column today by Pat Roush, who herself has fought for years to free her own daughters from Saudi Arabia, says Saga “has locked herself inside her room and keeps her little ones close by.” Roush has written a highly acclaimed book on her own ordeal, which documents her fight with both the Saudi government and the U.S. State Department in efforts to retrieve her two illegally abducted daughters from the desert kingdom.

Fox News has posted addresses of U.S. officials who can be contacted to express support for Saga in her quest for freedom for both herself and her children.

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