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Saudis release Saad Almadi — who was sentenced to 19 years for critical tweets

WASHINGTON — Saudi Arabia has released from prison the 72-year-old US citizen who had been sentenced to 19 years behind bars for tweets mildly critical of the kingdom’s crown prince.e

Saad Almadi, who was imprisoned for over a year, called his son Ibrahim Almadi Monday to let him know that was freed by the government of Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the younger Almadi told The Post.

But on the phone call, the elder Almadi also broke the bad news that he won’t be allowed to leave the country due to a continued travel ban.

He will be staying at a family residence in Riyadh until he’s allowed to leave the country.

“I welcome the release of Saad Almadi, my father and best friend,” Ibrahim said. “As I always say, we are the strongest country in the world. We can protect our interests and citizens.”

He added, “Our fight is not over until Saad is back… He needs medical attention in the states.”

Saad Almadi, a retired engineer who moved to the US in the 1970s, was detained during a November 2021 trip from Florida, where he wrote the tweets, to Saudi Arabia to sell property.

The offending tweets that landed Almadi in prison included remarks that Saudi officials were failing to protect against rocket fire from Iran-allied Houthi rebels in Yemen.

He also encouraged fellow Saudis to get Lebanese citizenship and wrote that he approved of Washington, DC, renaming a street after Jamal Khashoggi, the former Washington Post columnist who the US intelligence community believes was murdered on MBS’s orders in 2018.

He lost about 80 pounds behind bars living in inhumane conditions, his son said.

The release puzzlingly came only a month after three additional years were added to his prison sentence by a Saudi appeals court.

It’s unclear why the Saudi government under the crown prince, who is widely known by his initials MBS, relented or if the release was part of some larger agreement.

The development coincides with a series of developments in US-Saudi relations, including the Senate confirmation Wednesday of Michael Ratney to be the US ambassador to Riyadh after the post was left vacant for two years.

Also last Tuesday, US plane-maker Boeing agreed to sell up to 121 jets to the upstart Saudi airline Riyadh Air and national carrier Saudia Airlines.

It also comes amid other Saudi power plays, such as agreeing to a Chinese-brokered deal Friday to restore diplomatic relations with Iran — working with two top US strategic adversaries.

The younger Almadi, who lives in the Florida, vociferously pressed his father’s case — colorfully claiming that President Biden “sold my father for oil” when Biden visited Saudi Arabia in July on a mission to lower oil prices without publicly mentioning the case.

MBS badly embarrassed Biden by announcing plans to cut oil production ahead of the US presidential election — prompting Biden to muse about a reassess the US-Saudi relationship, though the White House later backed away from that posture.

The Biden administration in November granted MBS immunity from US lawsuits over his alleged rule in the Khashoggi murder, citing his new job title as prime minister.

Almadi was released just ahead of the Muslim holy month Ramadan, which begins on Wednesday. It’s unclear if other US citizens were affected by the development. At least three US citizens are known to face exit bans and others are rumored to be imprisoned.

The State Department did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.

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