Amnesty: Saudi Arabia beheading nearly two people per week this year
“A
spree of executions that has sent 10 prisoners to their deaths since the
beginning of the year in Saudi Arabia must be halted, Amnesty International
said today… Most legal proceedings in Saudi Arabia take place behind close
doors. Defendants are rarely allowed formal representation by a lawyer, and may
be convicted solely on the basis of confessions obtained under torture or other
ill-treatment, duress or deception. In many cases they are not informed of the
progress of legal proceedings against them. Saudi Arabia has a high rate of
executions. In 2011 at least 82 executions took place; more than triple the
figure of at least 27 executions in 2010. In 2012, a similar number of people
were executed. Out of the 10 executed in the first five and half weeks of 2013,
four were executed for drug related offences, and four were foreign nationals,
including Rizana Nafeek, a Sri Lankan domestic worker, who was only 17 at the
time of her alleged crime. As a state party to the Convention on the Rights of
the Child, Saudi Arabia is prohibited from imposing the death penalty on
persons who were under 18 years old at the time of the alleged offence for
which they were convicted.”
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