Khaled al-Jabri, son of Saad al-Jabri, told the Saudi ambassador to the United States, Princess Reem Bint Bandar, that her silence in the face of humanitarian appeals on his two brothers foretells a lot and cannot be overlooked.

He asked - in a series of tweets on Twitter - how could she remain silent, despite the fact that the United States is among the many countries that have demanded the release of his two brothers who are wrongfully detained.

Khaled Al-Jabri added that there is no need for the Saudi authorities to pay US $ 8 million to US public relations companies to improve their image, because the release of his brothers Sarah and Omar and their return to their families will do so for free.

Khaled al-Jabri called on the Saudi ambassador to reflect on his brothers ’photo until he renewed contact with her the next day, telling her," You will sleep better if you do the right thing. "

Ambassador @rbalsaud,

your silence in response to my humanitarian appeal to you is deafening and telling.

How can you be mum when the US Govt is among the many calling for the release of my unjustly imprisoned sister and brother? @SaveSarahNOmar 1/5 pic.twitter.com/ciK4UmjEQh

- Dr. Khalid Aljabri | Khaled Al-Jabri (@JabriMD) August 12, 2020

Khaled al-Jabri accuses agents of the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of kidnapping his two brothers as "hostages" about 5 months ago, to put pressure on their father, the former intelligence officer Saad Al-Jabri, and forcing him to surrender to the Saudi authorities.

He stated in an exclusive interview with the American "CNN" network that his family faced "an illegal, cross-border terrorist campaign."

The lawsuit filed by Saad al-Jabri, an advisor to the former Saudi crown prince, Muhammad bin Nayef, against the current crown prince and a number of his aides in Washington are still reverberating in Canada on the media, political and security levels.

The Canadian authorities intensified their measures to protect Al-Jabri, after their success in thwarting two assassination attempts. The first was in October 2018, according to the lawsuit, and the other was in the past weeks, according to local media.

Saad al-Jabri is a former Saudi security official and the right-hand man of Prince Muhammad bin Nayef, who was removed from the mandate of the Covenant in 2017.