U.N. HUMAN RIGHTS CHIEF CONDEMNS SAUDI ARABIA FOR BEHEADING OF 37 MEN
Most were minority Shi’ite Muslims who may not have had fair trials and at least three were minors when sentenced, the UN Human Rights Chief said.
BY REUTERS. APRIL 24, 2019
GENEVA/DUBAI
– The UN human rights chief on Wednesday
condemned the beheadings of 37 Saudi nationals across the kingdom this week,
saying most were minority Shi’ite Muslims who may not have had fair trials and
at least three were minors when sentenced.
Saudi Arabia, which said on Tuesday it had carried out the executions over
terrorism crimes, has come under increasing global scrutiny over its human
rights record since the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi last year at the
kingdom’s Istanbul consulate and the detention of women’s rights activists.
“It is particularly abhorrent
that at least three of those killed were minors at the time of their
sentencing,” UN
High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said in a statement issued
in Geneva.
She said United Nations rapporteurs had expressed concern about a lack of due
process and fair trial guarantees amid allegations
that confessions were obtained through torture.
Amnesty International said late on Tuesday the majority of those executed in six cities belonged to the Shi’ite minority and were
convicted after “sham trials,” included at least 14 people who
had participated in anti-government protests in the kingdom’s oil-rich Eastern
Province in 2011-2012.
It said in a statement that one of them, Abdulkareem al-Hawaj, was arrested
when he was 16, making his execution a “flagrant violation of
international law.”
London-based Amnesty said 11 of those executed had been convicted of spying for
the kingdom’s arch-adversary, Shi’ite Muslim Iran, and sentenced to death in
2016.
The Shi’ite-majority Eastern Province became a focal point of unrest in early
2011 with demonstrations calling for an end to discrimination and for reforms
in the Sunni Muslim monarchy. Saudi Arabia denies any discrimination against
Shi’ites.
The Saudi government’s press office did not immediately respond to Reuters’
request for comment on Bachelet’s remarks or the Amnesty report. Authorities have said the men were executed
for “extremist terrorist ideologies,” forming “terrorist cells
to corrupt and disrupt security” and inciting sectarian strife.
Bachelet
called on Riyadh to review counter-terrorism laws and halt pending executions,
including of three men on death row – Ali al-Nimr, Dawood al-Marhoon and
Abdulla al-Zaher – whose cases she said had been taken up by the UN rights
system.
Amnesty
said the kingdom has stepped up the rate of executions in 2019, with at least
104 people put to death since the start of the year compared to 149 for the
whole of 2018.
Tuesday’s
mass execution was “another gruesome indication of how the death penalty
is being used as a political tool to crush dissent from within”
the country’s Shi’ite minority, said Lynn Maalouf, the group’s research
director for the Middle East.
European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said the executions
heightened doubts about respect for the right to a fair trial in Saudi Arabia
and could fuel sectarian violence.
New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said at least 33 of the 37 men put to death
were Shi’ites and it was the largest set of executions in the kingdom since
January 2016.
It said one of the men convicted of protest-related offenses, Mujtaba
al-Sweikat, was arrested in 2012 as he was about to board a plane bound for the
United States to attend university.
“Mass
executions are not the mark of a ‘reformist’ government, but rather one marked
by capricious, autocratic rule,” HRW’s Middle East director Michael Page
said.
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