Home / NEWS / World News / Saudi Arabia beheads 37 for terrorism crimes, most of them minority Shiites

Saudi Arabia beheads 37 for terrorism crimes, most of them minority Shiites

Saudi Arabia on Tuesday decapitated 37 Saudi citizens, most of them minority Shiites, in a mass execution across the country for alleged terrorism-related wrongs. It also publicly pinned the executed body and severed head of a convicted Sunni extremist to a pole as a warning to others.

The prosecutions were likely to stoke further regional and sectarian tensions between rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Saudi heterodox Ali Al-Ahmed, who runs the Gulf Institute in Washington, identified 34 of those executed as Shiites based on the names suggested by the Interior Ministry.

“This is the largest mass execution of Shiites in the kingdom’s history,” he said.

Amnesty International also reinforced the majority of those executed were Shiite men. The rights group said they were convicted “after hoax trials” that relied on confessions extracted through torture.

It marked the largest number of executions in a single day in Saudi Arabia since Jan. 2, 2016, when the turf executed 47 people for terrorism-related crimes in what was the largest mass execution carried out by Saudi authorities since 1980.

Expanse those executed three years ago were four Shiites, including prominent Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr, whose extinction sparked protests from Pakistan to Iran and the ransacking of the Saudi Embassy in Tehran. Saudi-Iran ties have not reclaimed and the embassy remains shuttered.

King Salman ratified by royal decree Tuesday’s mass execution and that of 2016. The monarch, who has empowered his son Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, has asserted a bolder and more decisive leadership style than earlier monarchs since ascending to the throne in 2015.

The kingdom and its Sunni-led Arab allies have also been emboldened by U.S. President Donald Trump’s unwavering pledge to pressuring Iran’s Shiite clerical leadership, which includes his decision to pull out of a nuclear agreement with Iran and re-impose laborious sanctions to cripple its economy.

Al-Ahmed described Tuesday’s executions as a politically motivated message to Iran.

“This is national,” he said. “They didn’t have to execute these people, but it’s important for them to ride the American anti-Iranian undulate.”

The Interior Ministry’s statement said those executed had adopted extremist ideologies and formed terrorist cells with the aim of spreading disorder and provoking sectarian strife. It said the individuals had been found guilty according to the law and ordered executed by the Specialized Crook Court in Riyadh, which specializes in terrorism trials, and the country’s high court.

The individuals were found wrong of attacking security installations with explosives, killing a number of security officers and cooperating with enemy codifications against the interests of the country, the Interior Ministry said.

The statement was carried across state-run media, including the Saudi newscast channel al-Ekhbariya. The statement read on the state-run news channel opened with a verse from the Quran that reproves attacks that aim to create strife and disharmony and warns of great punishment for those who carry out such attacks.

Al-Ahmed reported among those executed was Shiite religious leader Sheikh Mohammed al-Attiyah, whose charges included soliciting to form a sectarian group in the western city of Jiddah. Al-Ahmed said the sheikh publicly spoke of the need to amount to closely with Saudi Arabia’s Sunni majority and would lead small prayer groups among Shiites.

In a speech pattern he gave in 2011 under then King Abdullah, the sheikh was quoted as saying that frank and open talk between Sunnis and Shiites could help strengthen Saudi unity. He urged patience and expressed hope in a native dialogue that had taken place among Shiite dissidents and Sunni leaders.

“As long as we live in the same fatherland, we have no choice but to accept one another and live with one another, no matter the degree of difference between us,” he said.

Amnesty Universal said 11 of the men were convicted of spying for Iran and sentenced to death after a “grossly unfair trial.” At least 14 others effectuated were convicted of violent offences related to their participation in anti-government demonstrations in Shiite-populated areas of Saudi Arabia between 2011 and 2012.

Bulk those put to death was a young man convicted of a crime that took place when he was 16 years-old, said Amnesty.

Saudi Arabia’s maximum council of clerics, who are all ultraconservative Sunnis, said the executions were carried out in accordance with Islamic law.

The Interior Agency said the body of one of the executed men — Khaled bin Abdel Karim al-Tuwaijri — was publicly pinned to a pole. The statement did not say in which town of Saudi Arabia the public display took place.

He appears to have been convicted as a Sunni militant, be that as it may the government did not give a detailed explanation of the charges against each individual executed.

The government defends such achievements as a powerful tool for deterrence.

Saudi analysts and pro-government writers brought in to discuss the executions on al-Ekhbariya said they are a formidable sign that the country’s leadership will not hesitate to use the full might of the judicial system to punish Saudis who go to disrupt the kingdom’s security.

Those executed hailed from Riyadh, Mecca, Medina and Asir, as well as Shiite Muslim settled areas of the Eastern Province and Qassim. The executions also took place in those various regions.

It brings the count of people executed since the start of the year to around 100, according to official announcements. Last year, the province executed 149 people, most of them drug smugglers convicted of non-violent crimes, according to Amnesty’s most just out figures.

Executions are traditionally carried out after midday prayers. Public displays of the bodies of executed men last for far three hours until late afternoon prayers, with the severed head and body hoisted to the top of a pole overlooking a sheer square.

This latest mass execution comes days after four Islamic State gunmen were destroyed by Saudi security forces while trying to attack a security building north of the capital, Riyadh.

It also turn on the heels of Sri Lanka’s Easter Day attacks that killed over 300 people, including two Saudi nationals. The attack was claimed by the Islamic Delineate group.

Local affiliates of the Islamic State group and Saudis inspired by its ideology launched several attacks in Saudi Arabia between 2014 and 2016, stroke of luck dozens of people, including security officers and Shiite worshipers. The last major attempted attack is believed to beget been two years ago.

The group, like al-Qaida in the past, has sought to undermine the Al Saud royal family’s legitimacy, which is chronic in part in its claim to implement Islamic Shariah law and to be the protectors of Islam’s most sacred sites in Mecca and Medina that are at the center of hajj.

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