A Twitter account of the "prisoners of conscience" revealed that most of those described as "September detainees" who are in Dhahban prison in Saudi Arabia have been transferred to solitary confinement again, and the procedures for interrogating them will start from the starting point within the next few days.

The account - which is concerned with following the news of the prisoners of conscience in Saudi Arabia - confirmed that Sheikh Salman Al-Awda is currently in Al-Ha'ir prison in Riyadh, and he is still completely prohibited from contacting the family, since the last section of his contact spread in mid-May.

He also confirmed that the visits of the families of the "September detainees" in Dhahban prison had been completely cut off for four months, and that contacts with them had been cut off a month ago, by order of the investigators.

He added that the failure of Dahaban prison to respond to the detainees' families during the past weeks was due to canceling the contact numbers that were with the families, or transferring them to use other governmental and private parties.

He considered that the cancellation of contact numbers and failure to inform the families of this constituted manipulation of the feelings of the families of the detainees, and "a major human rights violation that should not be tolerated."

Last month, Al-Jazeera broadcast a documentary film dealing with human rights, humanitarian and social conditions inside Dhahban prison.

The issue of Al-Hathloul
In the same context, Lina asked the sister of the detainee Lujain Al-Hathloul to disclose the location of her sister, and she said in a series of tweets on Twitter that Lujain had not contacted the family in thirty days.

Lina asked about the fate of the investigation that the Crown Prince had promised to conduct in a case of torture to Jin, and also asked about the fate of the investigation into the kidnapping of her sister from the Emirati capital Abu Dhabi.

Al-Hathloul called for revealing the person in charge of Lujain solitary confinement, especially that her sister's case is classified as an information crime case, according to her.