Saudi Arabia fights extremism with '5-star' rehab centre
With its indoor swimming pool, sun-splashed patios and liveried staff, the Saudi complex has the trappings of a five-star resort, but it is actually a rehab centre — for violent militants.
Riyadh's Mohammed bin Nayef Counselling and Care Centre, a cushy halfway house between prison and freedom, spotlights a controversial Saudi strategy for tackling homegrown extremists.
While the global fight against terrorism is often associated with drone strikes and torture, the philosophy that underpins the centre's approach is that extremism requires not coercion but an ideological cure.
Overseen by clerics and psychologists, it works to prevent convicts who have served their sentences from returning to militancy, through what it calls religious counselling and ideological detoxification.