Saudi Arabia Tops 100 Executions in 2023
By Staff, Agencies
Amnesty International announced that the number of executions conducted by Saudi Arabia this year has surpassed 100, raising concerns that the death penalty is being used in the kingdom in violation of international law.
The number of executions is less than the 196 executions conducted in 2022. However, it is still nearly double the number of state-sanctioned killings conducted in 2021.
“In clear contrast to Saudi Arabia’s repeated promises to limit its use of the death penalty, the Saudi authorities have already executed 100 people this year, revealing their chilling disregard for the right to life,” Heba Morayef, Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa director, said in a statement on Friday.
She further added that “The authorities’ relentless killing spree raises serious fears for the lives of young men on death row who were under 18 at the time of the crimes.”
Last year, Saudi Arabia ranked third in the world for the number of executions carried out.
The number of recorded executions tripled from 65 executions in 2021 to 196 in 2022 in the kingdom.
More than 1,000 death sentences have been carried out since King Salman assumed power in 2015, according to a report published earlier this year by British-based Reprieve and the ESOHR.
The Amnesty director noted that in the month of August, the number of executions carried out by the Saudi government was averaging four executions per week.
The sanctioned killings have extended beyond Saudi nationals as well, with the rights group reporting that a Pakistani man was executed over the crime of drug smuggling.
Groups like Amnesty have accused Saudi authorities of executing people in the country following "grossly unfair trials that fell far short of international human rights standards".
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