Saudi
Arabia executes 47 people, incl prominent Shiite cleric, on terror charges
Published
time: 2 Jan, 2016 07:24Edited time: 2 Jan, 2016 09:34
A
poster of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr. © Khaled Abdullah Ali Al Mahdi / Reuters
Wow! Iran's supreme leader's website posts this picture, equating Saudi with ISIS. #Nimr @ggreenwald @mehdirhasan
Wow! Iran's supreme leader's website posts this picture, equating Saudi with ISIS. #Nimr @ggreenwald @mehdirhasan
Saudi
Arabia has executed 47 people for terrorism, including the prominent Shi'ite
Muslim cleric Nimr al-Nimr, the Interior Ministry said Saturday. His execution
has stirred particular outrage among the kingdom's critics, saying the cleric's
death aims to “set the region on fire.”
Most
of those executed were said to be involved in a series of attacks carried out
by Al Qaeda between 2003 and 2006.
Iran
has warned that executing al-Nimr "would cost Saudi Arabia dearly,"
Reuters reported.
A
prominent state-affiliated Iranian cleric, Ahmad Khatami, said the execution of
Nimr al-Nimr was something to be expected from “criminal” Saudi
Arabia, Iranian Fars agency reported. He added that Saudi ruling family would
be “wiped from the pages of history” for executing the cleric,
Mehr reported.
An
MP from the ruling Shi'ite coalition in Iraq said Nimr's execution aimed to “set
region on fire,” Sumaria TV reported.
The
Lebanese Supreme Shi'ite Council has condemned al-Nimr's execution, calling it
a serious “mistake.”
Nimr,
along with six others, were accused of orchestrating anti-government protests
between 2011 and 2013 in which 20 people died. Earlier this year, the kingdom's
Supreme Court rejected an appeal against the death sentence passed on the Shia
cleric.
The
brother of the executed cleric said he hopes that any reaction to Nimr
al-Nimr's killing will be peaceful.
DETAILS: 45 of those executed were of #Saudi nationality, one Chadian, one Egyptian on.rt.com/70uq
"Sheikh
Nimr enjoyed high esteem in his community and within Muslim society in general
and no doubt there will be reaction," Mohammed al-Nimr told Reuters by
telephone. "We hope that any reactions would be confined to a peaceful
framework. No one should have any reaction outside this peaceful framework.
Enough bloodshed"
The
Interior Ministry statement announcing the executions began with verses from
the Koran, justifying the use of the death penalty, while state television
showed footage of the aftermath of Al Qaeda attacks over the last decade. Shortly
afterward, Saudi Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdulaziz Al al-Sheikh appeared on Saudi
Arabian television, hailing the executions as just.
In
its statement, the ministry listed the names of all those it said were
convicted on charges of terrorism, Al Jazeera reported, including
Al-Qaeda-affiliated Faris al-Zahrani, who was once on the list of Saudi
Arabia's "most wanted terrorists." Last year a Saudi Arabian
court sentenced him to death, and ordered his body to be displayed in public
after the capital punishment was carried out.
Among
those executed were also one Egyptian and one Chadian, the ministry reportedly
stated.
The
absolutist Sunni Muslim monarchy carried out at least 158 executions in 2015,
with beheadings reaching their highest level in two decades, according to human
rights groups.
Read
more
Adam
Coolge, Middle east researcher for Human Rights Watch, told AP that Saudi
Arabia had executed almost twice as many people in 2015 as the year before. The
horrific figure is second only to 1995, when the Gulf kingdom executed 192
people.
Saudi
Arabia carries out most executions through beheading and often in public,
giving rise to comparisons with terrorist group Islamic State (which also
claims to be implementing Shariah law) while carrying out public beheadings.
The
Gulf monarchy, however, has rejected parallels with Islamic State (IS,
previously ISIS/ISIL). Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir told reporters in Paris
in December that "it's easy to say Wahhabism equals Daesh equals
terrorism, which is not true," referring to the Arabic acronym for IS.
The
absolutist monarchy argues that its judicial processes require at least 13
judges in three tiers of its courts system to rule in favor of a death sentence
before it is carried out. According to Saudi officials, the executions are
aimed at curbing crime.
Saudi
law allows for execution in cases of murder, rape and drug offenses. The death
penalty also applies to adultery, apostasy and witchcraft.
Read
more
The
number of prisoners put to death for non-lethal offenses, such as illicit drug
use, have also skyrocketed. A royal decree issued in Saudi Arabia in 2005 to
combat narcotics further codified the right of judges to issue execution sentences
"as a discretionary penalty" against any person found guilty
of smuggling, receiving or manufacturing drugs.
In
November 2015, at least 63 people (including 45 foreign nationals) were
executed since the start of the year for drug-related offenses, Amnesty
International said. That figure accounted for at least 40 percent of the total
number of executions in 2015 (compared to less than 4 percent for drug-related
executions in 2010).
"Foreign
nationals, mostly migrant workers from developing countries, are particularly
vulnerable as they typically lack knowledge of Arabic and are denied adequate
translation during their trials,” Amnesty said.
According
to Human Rights Watch, of the first 100 prisoners executed in 2015, at least 56
sentences were carried out based on judicial discretion, not for crimes for
which Saudi law requires a mandatory death penalty.
Delphine
Lourtau, research director at Cornell Law School's Death Penalty Worldwide,
told AP that defendants in Saudi Arabia are not provided with defense lawyers
and in numerous cases of South Asians arrested for drug trafficking, are not
even provided translators in court hearings. There are also concerns "over
the degree of influence the executive has on trial outcomes" when it
comes to cases where Shi’ite activists are sentenced to death, she said.
Emory
Law professor and Shariah scholar Abdullahi An-Naim has said that since there
is an "inherent infallibility in court systems," no judicial
system can claim to enforce an immutable, infallible form of Shariah, AP
reported him as saying.
After
an avalanche of international criticism from human rights groups, Saudi
Arabia’s representative to the United Nations Human Rights Council, Bandar
al-Aiban, claimed in a speech in Geneva in March that capital punishment
applies "only [to] those who commit heinous crimes that threaten
security."
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