The Associated Press (AP) is reporting Saudi Arabia executed 81 people last Saturday March 12, 2022 for crimes ranging from killings to belonging to militant groups, the largest known execution carried out in the kingdom in its modern history. The number of persons executed surpassed the toll of a January 1980 mass execution for the 63 militants convicted of seizing the Grand Mosque in Mecca in 1979, the worst ever militant attack to target the kingdom and Islam’s holiest site.
The execution happened as much of the world’s attention remained focused on Russia’s unprovoked war on Ukraine and as the British Prime Minister Boris Johnson reportedly is planning a trip to Saudi Arabia over oil prices as well. The number of death penalty cases being carried out in Saudi Arabia had dropped during the coronavirus pandemic, though the kingdom continued to behead convicts under King Salman and his assertive son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
The Kingdom in a statement said some of those executed were members of al-Qaeda, the Islamic State group and also backers of Yemen’s Houthi rebels. It included 73 Saudis, seven Yemenis and one Syrian. The statement did not say where the executions took place. “The accused were provided with the right to an attorney and were guaranteed their full rights under Saudi law during the judicial process, which found them guilty of committing multiple heinous crimes that left a large number of civilians and law enforcement officers dead,” the Saudi Press Agency said.
“The kingdom will continue to take a strict and unwavering stance against terrorism and extremist ideologies that threaten the stability of the entire world,” the report added. It did not say how the prisoners were executed, though death-row inmates typically are beheaded in Saudi Arabia. The executions drew immediate international criticism from Ali Adubusi, the director of the European Saudi Organization for Human Rights, he alleged that some of those executed had been tortured and faced trials “carried out in secret.” “These executions are the opposite of justice,” he said.
The kingdom’s last mass execution came in January 2016 when it executed 47 people, including a prominent opposition Shiite Cleric who had rallied demonstrations. In 2019, the kingdom beheaded 37 Saudi citizens, most of them minority Shiites, in a mass execution for alleged terrorism-related crimes. It also publicly nailed the severed body and head of a convicted extremist to a pole as a warning to others. Such crucifixions after execution, while rare, do occur in the kingdom. Activists, including Ali al-Ahmed of the U.S.-based Institute for Gulf Affairs, and the group Democracy for the Arab World Now said they believe that over three dozen of those executed Saturday also were Shiites. The Saudi statement, however, did not identify the faiths of those killed.
Sporadic protests erupted last Saturday night in the island kingdom of Bahrain which has a majority Shiite population but is ruled by a Sunni monarchy, a Saudi.
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