Police spokesman Lt Col Ati bin Attiya al-Qarshi said in a statement that some of the foreign detainees at the al-Shemaisi center in the Red Sea city of Jiddah rioted yesterday and clashed with security personnel. He did not give the reasons for rioting or reveal the victims' nationalities.
Yemeni online forums and news websites reported that 10 Yemenis were killed when police opened fire on the rioters who were demanding that Saudi authorities speed up their deportation.
The deportations are part of a Saudi campaign to expel undocumented foreign workers after decades of lax immigration enforcement allowed migrants to take many low-wage jobs that the kingdom's own citizens shunned. Saudi authorities, grappling with high unemployment, now want those jobs for the kingdom's citizens.
Hundreds of thousands of Yemenis seek work in oil-rich Saudi Arabia, sometimes crossing into the kingdom illegally through their country's porous northern border. Yemen is the Arab world's most impoverished country and is reeling from several years of turmoil and political upheaval.
Similar clashes also broke out in Jiddah when police combed the area for migrants.
Human Rights Watch has criticized the conditions of detainees awaiting deportation in the kingdom. The rights group last month said more than 12,000 Somali migrants were held under "appalling conditions" before they were deported from Saudi Arabia.
The Saudi government says it has deported more than a quarter-million migrants since the government began enforcing its crackdown in November.
An additional one million migrant workers were forced to leave the kingdom, or face arrest and deportation, during an amnesty period ahead of the government crackdown. The majority of foreign workers in the kingdom are from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia and the Philippines, as well as Egypt and Yemen.
