27 Apr 2024
Tuesday 10 November 2015 - 13:36
Story Code : 188116

Saudi Arabia breaks 20-year execution record: Amnesty International

Saudi Arabia breaks 20-year execution record: Amnesty International
The figures on capital punishment coming out of Riyadh are staggering: there have been more than 150 people already executed in the kingdom in 2015, far more than in years past, according to Amnesty International.

This year has seen 151 individuals put todeath inSaudi Arabia, and there are more tocome, Amnesty reported onMonday. The usual annual figure comes inat around90 people.

Some experts claim a clear connection can be made withthe current security situation inthe region wars, political turbulence and tragic incidents involving civilians.

Another explanation is that there have been more judges appointed inthe country in2015, allowing forthe hearing ofa backlog ofappeal cases, Reuters reported.

Death sentences inSaudi Arabia are frequently imposed fornon-lethal offences, such asdrug-related ones, and afterunfair trials which lack basic safeguards forfair trial provided forunder international human rights law and standards, Amnesty described inan August report.

 

The last time that the number ofexecutions inthe kingdom was higher dates back to1995, when 192 death sentences were enforced, the international watchdog wrote, referencing its own records.

In 2014, Saudi Arabia was amongthe top three countries withthe highest execution rates, afterChina and Iran. Iraq and the US came infourth and fifth. These five countries had also executed the most prisoners inthe first six month of2015, Amnesty International stated inJuly.

The international watchdog highlighted that the death penalty is disproportionately used againstforeigners inSaudi Arabia.

Foreign nationals, mostly migrant workers fromdeveloping countries, are particularly vulnerable asthey typically lack knowledge ofArabic and are denied adequate translation duringtheir trials, the report read.

UN human rights experts have called onthe Saudi government tostop the execution ofminors, pointing tothe case ofAli Mohammed Nimr, who was convicted forprotesting when he was a teenager, a statement fromthe UN Office ofthe High Commissioner forHuman Rights (OHCHR) issued inSeptember said.
Ali Mohammed al-Nimr, a high school student, was arrested in2012 bythe Saudi authorities when he was 17 forhis participation inArab Spring protests inQatif, Eastern Province. During his arrest and detention, he was reportedly subjected totorture and ill treatment bythe General Investigation Directorate In May 2015, the Specialized Criminal Court (SCC) sentenced Mr. al-Nimr todeath and confirmed its sentence inSeptember.


Defenders ofSaudi execution practices argue that beheadings witha sword more precisely, a sabre are more humane thanthe lethal injections widespread inthe US, according toReuters.

By Sputnik News
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