http://english.pravda.ru/world/asia/15-03-2013/124079-saudi_arabia-0/


Saudi Arabia needs more executioners
15.03.2013 
In Saudi Arabia - the country that lives under Sharia law - death penalty is 
carried out by beheading or crucifixion. Saudi authorities have faced the 
shortage of executioners and consider an opportunity to replace traditional 
methods of execution with execution by shooting. This does not improve anything 
for those residing in the poor south of the country. They can not pay the 
ransom that replaces death penalty. Those people have to deal with much tougher 
punishments than the Muslims of Mecca and Medina.

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia practices public executions for such crimes as 
rape, murder, apostasy, armed robbery, witchcraft, drug trafficking and drug 
consumption. The main department of the country that ensures the compliance 
with Islamic Sharia laws, which is called the Committee for the Promotion of 
Virtue and the Prevention of Vice does not to consider it necessary for a 
suspect to have a lawyer. The committee turns a blind eye to the fact that many 
suspects testify under tortures. One of the people, who was supposed to be 
crucified on Tuesday, March 12th, used a cell phone from a prison in Abha 
Province to cry for help.

Nasser Al-Qahtani told The Associated Press that he was arrested for stealing a 
ring from a jewelry store in 2004. The man said that he was tortured and was 
not provided with a lawyer.  "I did not kill anyone. I did not have a weapon 
while robbing the store, but the police tortured, beat me and threatened to 
attack my mother. They did all that to make me say that I had a gun, but I 
didn't have it, I was 15 years old at that time," said Qahtani.

In 2009, a Sharia court sentenced him and seven other people, allegedly members 
of the criminal group that was robbing jewelry stores, to death.

Three men of this group were sentenced to death by shooting, according to Saudi 
newspaper Okaz. This "new" form of Sharia punishment may soon displace 
beheading, crucifixion, quartering, stoning or burying a person alive. The 
authorities recognized that traditional executions were quite expensive 
"events" as they are performed in public and require high security costs. In 
addition, there is a serious shortage of skilled butchers. One of them - the 
"leading" Saudi executioner Muhammad Saad Beshi, said in an interview with the 
Saudi newspaper Arab News in 2003, that he was decapitating more than ten 
people a day. He always keeps his sword sharp and even lets his children clean 
it. "It surprises people how quickly I can separate the head from the body," 
the newspaper quoted Beshi.

Sharia law leaves a loophole for death convicts, if they have money. The 
an-eye-for-an-eye principle of the Islamic law allows to replace death penalty 
with Diyya - the ransom that is paid by the criminal's family, if the convict's 
family agrees to that. Diyya may amount to millions of dollars. For Nasser 
Al-Qahtani it was definitely not an option. The man comes from the south of the 
country, where people are seen as second class citizens and face systematic 
discrimination, including the application of Sharia law.

Ali al-Ahmed, the director of the Washington Institute for Gulf Affairs, wrote 
in a statement to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights that one of the 
reasons for the death penalty in the jewelry case was the territorial identity 
of the convicts. Southern provinces are "largely marginalized by Saudi 
monarchy, and its residents are treated as lower class citizens," he wrote. 
Such a state of affairs exists because the south of Saudi Arabia is the home to 
the followers of the "lost sect" that maintains close contacts with its Yemeni 
"associates."

In January 2012, the United Nations Organization for Human Rights expressed 
concerns about the increasing number of executions in Saudi Arabia. In 2010, 26 
people were executed for various crimes. In 2011, there were 76 executions. 
There were at least three women and eleven foreigners among those sentenced. 
This is unofficial information. Human Rights Watch (HRW) gives the figure of 69 
deaths, while Amnesty International - 79, including five women. The West 
relentlessly criticizes Iran for death penalty used against women and says 
nothing about the same practice in Saudi Arabia.

In 2011, the execution of a 54-year old Indonesian woman, a maid, received an 
extensive media coverage. She confessed to the murder of her employer. The 
woman stabbed him after the man raped her. In January 2013, a young nurse from 
Sri Lanka was publicly executed for the murder of a child of her employers 
committed in 2007, when she was just 17. Human rights groups say that as many 
as 45 Indonesian women expect their death, mostly on false charges of theft and 
sorcery, whereas victims of sexual violence are executed for charges of 
adultery and fornication.

Saudi Arabia is one of the most cruel and repressive countries in the world, 
but it enjoys the patronage of the U.S. as an unconditional ally in the region. 
As long as all major media resources are in the hands of the State Department, 
the world does not know anything about how the Wahhabis abuse and torture local 
people. This practice of double standards demonstrates the immorality of 
military and political support of the West to such regimes as the Saudi one.

Lyuba Lulko

Pravda.Ru 


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