Beheadings remain integral part of Saudi justice system

Rights campaigners decry frequent use of a form of execution that has
aroused revulsion elsewhere

September 11, 2014 1:30PM ET 

by  <http://america.aljazeera.com/profiles/a/amel-ahmed.html> Amel Ahmed
<http://www.twitter.com/amelscript> @amelscript 

The beheading of Pakistani national Izzat Gul for drug trafficking was Saudi
Arabia's 46th such execution for 2014, according to Human Rights Watch
(HRW). In August alone, Saudi Arabia
<http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2014/08/rights-groups-says-surge-s
audi-beheadings-20148211414761155.html> decapitated 19 people, eight of them
for nonviolent offenses, including sorcery, the rights group added.

While the beheading of ISIS captives James Foley and Steven Sotloff provoked
global outrage, human rights groups decry the limited international
attention given to Saudi Arabia's use of decapitation even for nonviolent
crimes — a punishment so routine that Deera Square in Riyadh is sometimes
referred to as “Chop Chop Square.”

U.S. President Barack Obama failed to raise “a single human rights issue”
with Riyadh during his trip to Saudi Arabia in March, said Adam Coogle, a
Middle East researcher at HRW. Secretary of State John Kerry was in Saudi
Arabia on Thursday to discuss U.S. strategy to combat Islamic State fighters
in the region. In press briefings ahead of the trip, there were no
indication that the issue of human rights would be brought up. 

“There are a lot of interests at play in the U.S.-Saudi relationship,
including economic and geostrategic issues as well as counterterrorism,”
Coogle said. “Unfortunately, the U.S. prioritized these other interests over
using its close relationship to push the Saudi government to make human
rights reforms.”

Coogle said Saudi Arabia executes, on average, about 100 people a year, most
via beheading, noting that the kingdom orders the death penalty as the
sentence for a number of nonviolent offenses, including drug crimes,
adultery and practices it deems witchcraft. The kingdom has one of the
world’s highest execution rates, according to
<http://www.deathpenaltyworldwide.org/index.cfm> Death Penalty Worldwide, an
organization that collects information on executions.


Criminalizing dissent


Part of rights groups' concern is that Riyadh is using violent forms of
punishment to quash dissent.

Gul’s execution came shortly after a court decision last week upholding a
10-year jail sentence and 1,000 lashes — meted out in weekly installments of
50 lashes — against blogger Raef Badawi, who was charged with "insulting
Islam" and "going beyond the realm of obedience." 

A Saudi news agency reported Badawi's conviction in March for his connection
to "reformists" and for his tweets "against the rulers, religious scholars
and government agencies."

His lawyer, Waleed Abu Alkhair — currently in jail facing similar charges —
told the  <http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-23506404> BBC that his
client's charges concerned statements posted online calling for a relaxation
of Saudi Arabia's strict interpretation of Islam.

Amnesty International has designated Badawi a prisoner of conscience,
"detained solely for peacefully exercising his right to freedom of
expression."

"Badawi's harsh sentence shows how little tolerance there is for any sort of
expression that doesn’t jibe with the Saudi government’s official prescribed
narrative,” Coogle said, adding that the sentence is “very consistent” with
other penalties levied against liberals and human rights activists.

Saudi Arabia’s embassy in Washington did not respond to Al Jazeera's request
for comment by the time of publication.

The kingdom’s legal system relies on a hard-line reading of Islamic law, or
Sharia, by religious judges who, according to Coogle, often rely on  "ad-hoc
interpretations."

"Judges have leeway to criminalize all kinds of things,” he said. “It's
completely left to the discretion of judges, within parameters of Islamic
law, to state what the crime is and also the intended punishment."

In February, Saudi Arabia enacted a new Law for the Crimes of Terrorism and
its Financing, legislation that some critics warn is vague and could be used
to penalize anyone who criticizes the Saudi establishment.

Over the last two months, Saudi courts sentenced to death five religious
leaders and activists who participated in protests demanding constitutional
reform. All five were charged and convicted on terrorism charges under the
new legislation.

The new laws “turn almost any critical expression or independent association
into crimes of terrorism,” said  <http://www.hrw.org/bios/joe-stork> Joe
Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch.

He said this is because "terrorism" can be nonviolent under the new laws,
whose definition of it includes any act intended to "insult the reputation
of the state," "harm public order" or "shake up the security of society."

Additional provisions in the new laws include the criminalization of
unorthodox beliefs and atheism, participating in any form of protest against
the government and attending conferences in or outside Saudi Arabia that
“sow discord” in society.

Despite the criticism of foreign human rights groups, any reforms are more
likely to originate in the corridors of power, said Juan Cole, a University
of Michigan history professor who is the director of the school's Center for
Middle Eastern and North African Studies. Politics in Saudi Arabia is
practiced in the backroom, he said, making it difficult to see incremental
changes.

"In 2005, they had their first municipal elections, the first elections of
any sort. That was a big deal," he said, adding that Saudi Arabia is a "very
dynamic society" in the "throes of enormous change."

He added, "The Saudi elite is well aware that with an increasingly
middle-class and educated public, the old form of absolute monarchy will be
difficult to keep going."

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
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                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
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