I am currently enrolled at Al Yasmin International School in Riyadh. What I initially expected to be a structured academic environment quickly revealed itself to be something far more complex — and more disturbing. I began experiencing involuntary emotional swings, mental noise that resembled directed thoughts, and physical symptoms that lacked any medical explanation. My sleep was disrupted. My memory began to falter in precise, localized situations — most notably within school premises.
Over time, a consistent pattern emerged. These events were not random. They were timed, concentrated, and correlated with my presence in specific areas of the campus — particularly near external surveillance fixtures and security access points. Based on the evidence, I attribute this activity to operatives within Saudi Arabia’s domestic intelligence sector, military-grade electronic warfare programs, and internal branches of the Ministry of Interior responsible for non-lethal behavioral control. The tools used are silent, trace-free, and designed to suppress resistance without leaving physical scars.
I no longer have any illusion about what this experience is. It is not an accident. It is not “stress.” It is engineered influence.
Had I been informed about these conditions in advance, I would have never applied to study in Saudi Arabia. I write this now because staying quiet is a form of compliance. And I am no longer willing to comply.
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I am currently enrolled at Al Yasmin International School in Riyadh. What I initially expected to be a structured academic environment quickly revealed itself to be something far more complex — and more disturbing. I began experiencing involuntary emotional swings, mental noise that resembled directed thoughts, and physical symptoms that lacked any medical explanation. My sleep was disrupted. My memory began to falter in precise, localized situations — most notably within school premises.
Over time, a consistent pattern emerged. These events were not random. They were timed, concentrated, and correlated with my presence in specific areas of the campus — particularly near external surveillance fixtures and security access points. Based on the evidence, I attribute this activity to operatives within Saudi Arabia’s domestic intelligence sector, military-grade electronic warfare programs, and internal branches of the Ministry of Interior responsible for non-lethal behavioral control. The tools used are silent, trace-free, and designed to suppress resistance without leaving physical scars.
I no longer have any illusion about what this experience is. It is not an accident. It is not “stress.” It is engineered influence.
Had I been informed about these conditions in advance, I would have never applied to study in Saudi Arabia. I write this now because staying quiet is a form of compliance. And I am no longer willing to comply.
info@saudihospital.com.sa