He also advised leading travel, telecommunications, insurance, pharmaceutical and real estate companies based in Saudi Arabia.
His law firm is specialising in Corporate, Capital Market, Insurance, Real Estate, Construction, Foreign Investments, Islamic Finance, Litigation, Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution.
On March 11, 2013, he used Twitter to share an allegation of government abuses against his clients, two of the most well-known human rights activists in Saudi Arabia and co founders of Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association (ACPRA): Mohammad Fahad al-Qahtani, an Indiana University educated economics professor and Abdullah al-Hamid, a professor of Arabic Literature and Poetry.
Others had tweeted the same information about the prisoners, but I was targeted personally because of my history with human rights cases”, says Abdulaziz Al Hussan to Elisabeth Andrews.
[3] The government of Saudi Arabia has threaten him to use the Interpol as tool against him if he travels out of the US, which he did to Europe where he holds meetings and present lectures in the UK, Belgium and the Netherlands in cooperation with Amnesty International.
[5] He quickly arranged to move to Bloomington, Indiana, in the US after contacting David C. Williams, the executive director at the Center for Constitutional Democracy about a possible post as a visiting scholar.