Saudi Arabia said the detainees had been convicted of terrorism charges, but death of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr is expected to heighten sectarian tensions in the region.
RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA—Saudi Arabia execution
Saturday of 47 prisoners, including an influential Shiite cleric,
threatened to further damage Sunni-Shiite relations in a regional
struggle playing out across the Middle East between the kingdom and its
regional foe Iran.
Shiite leaders across the region swiftly
condemned Riyadh and warned of sectarian backlash as Saudi Arabia
insisted the executions were part of a justified war on terrorism. Also
executed Saturday were Al Qaeda detainees who were convicted on
launching a spate of attacks against foreigners and security forces a
decade ago.
The execution now becomes another focal point
for sectarian and political wrangling between Saudi Arabia and Iran. The
two regional rivals back opposing sides in civil wars in Yemen and in
Syria. Saudi Arabia was also a vocal critic of the recent Iranian
agreement with world powers that ends international economic sanctions
in exchange for limits on the Iranian nuclear program.
Iranian politicians warned that the Saudi
monarchy would pay a heavy price for the death of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr.
The Iranian Foreign Ministry summoned the Saudi envoy in Tehran to
protest, and parliament speaker Ali Larijani said the execution would
prompt "a maelstrom" in Saudi Arabia.
Al-Nimr's execution could also antagonize the
Shiite-led government in Iraq, which has close relations with Tehran.
The Saudi embassy in Baghdad, which had been closed for nearly 25 years,
was reopened on Friday. An influential Shiite militia in Iraq, known as
Asaib AHL Al-Haq, called on the government Saturday to close down the
embassy.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Aabadi Tweeted
Saturday night that he was "shocked and saddened" by al-Nimr's
execution, adding that, "peaceful opposition is a fundamental right.
Repression does not last."
Hundreds of al-Nimr's supporters protested in
his hometown of al-Qatif in eastern Saudi Arabia, in neighbouring
Bahrain where police fired tear gas and bird shot, and as far away as
northern India.
Germany's Foreign Ministry said the cleric's
execution "strengthens our existing concerns about the growing tensions
and the deepening rifts in the region."
His death comes 11 months after Saudi Arabia
issued a sweeping counterterrorism law after Arab Spring protests shook
the region in 2011 and toppled several longtime autocrats. The law
codified that the kingdom could prosecute as a terrorist anyone who
demands reform, exposes corruption or otherwise engages in dissent or
violence against the government.
AKHTAR SOOMRO
Members of the Shi'ite ulema council hold a
sign for Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr who was executed along with others in Saudi
Arabia, during a protest demonstration in Karachi, Pakistan, January 2,
2016. The sign reads in Urdu, "Protest, Protest, Protest, we condemn
the martyring of Ayatullah Shaikh Baqar al-Nimr and other Muslims, and
demand human rights organisations take notice of the inhuman incident
and bring fact-finding to the public".
The convictions of those executed Saturday
were issued by Saudi Arabia's Specialized Criminal Court, established in
2008 to try terrorism cases.
To counter Arab Spring rumblings that
threatened to spill into eastern Saudi Arabia, the kingdom sent troops
in 2011 to crush Shiite protests demanding more political powers from
the Sunni-led, fraternal monarchy of Bahrain. More security forces were
also deployed that year to contain protests in Saudi Arabia's oil-rich
east, where al-Nimr rallied youth who felt disenfranchised and
persecuted.
A Saudi lawyer in the eastern region told The
Associated Press that three other Shiite political detainees were also
executed from among the 47. The lawyer spoke on condition of anonymity
for fear of reprisal.
Advocacy organization Reprieve, which works
against the death penalty worldwide, said two of the Shiites executed
were teenagers when they were arrested. Reprieve said Ali al-Ribh was 18
years old and Mohammed al-Shuyokh was 19 at the time of arrest in 2012.
Both were convicted on charges related to anti-government protests held
in eastern Saudi Arabia.
Dar Yasin
A Kashmiri Shiite Muslim man shouts slogans
against the execution of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, during a protest in
Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Saturday. Hundreds of Shiite
Muslims in Indian portion of Kashmiri rallied in the Shia dominated
areas protesting against Saudi Arabia, after it announced on Saturday it
had executed 47 prisoners convicted of terrorism charges.
Saudi Arabia says all those executed were
convicted of acts of terrorism. Al-Nimr and the three others mentioned
had been charged in connection with violence that led to the deaths of
several protesters and police officers.
Saudi Arabia's top cleric Grand Mufti Sheikh
Abdulaziz Al Sheikh defended the executions as in line with Islamic
sharia law. He described the executions as a "mercy to the prisoners"
because it would save them from committing more evil acts and prevent
chaos.
Islamic scholars around the world hold vastly
different views on the application of the death penalty in sharia law.
Saudi Arabia's judiciary adheres to one of the strictest
interpretations, a Sunni Muslim ideology referred to as Wahhabism.
Because Saudi Arabia carries out most
executions through beheading and sometimes in public, it has drawn
comparisons to extremist groups like Al Qaeda and the Islamic State
group — which also carry out public beheadings and claim to be
implementing sharia.
Saudi Arabia strongly rejects the comparisons
and points out that it has a judicial appeals process with executions
ultimately aimed at combating crime.
FAISAL Al NASSER
Major General Mansour Al-Turki, a security
spokesman from the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Interior, holds a news
conference on the executions of 47 people, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
January 2, 2016.
In Lebanon, senior Shiite cleric Abdul-Amir
Kabalan described al-Nimr's execution as "a grave mistake that could
have been avoided with a royal amnesty."
The Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah
issued a statement calling al-Nimr's execution an "assassination" and a
"ugly crime." The group added that those who carry the "moral and direct
responsibility for this crime are the United States and its allies who
give direct protection to the Saudi regime."
In a press conference Saturday, Saudi Interior
Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Mansour al-Turki said the executions were
carried out inside prisons and not in public, as is sometimes the case.
The Interior Ministry, which announced the names of all 47 people
executed in a statement, said a royal court order was issued to
implement the sentences after all appeals had been exhausted.
The Saudi television airwaves were flooded
with pro-government analysts saying the executions are a blow to critics
who accuse the kingdom of not doing enough to counter extremism. One
analyst pointed out that France declared a state of emergency and
prioritized security after the recent Paris attacks that killed more
than 120 people.
Meanwhile, the execution of Al Qaeda militants
raised concerns over revenge attacks. The extremist group's branch in
Yemen, known as Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, had threatened
violence against Saudi security forces last month if they carried out
executions of its fighters.
One of the executed was Faris al-Shuwail, a
leading ideologue in Al Qaeda's Saudi branch who was arrested in August
2004 during a massive crackdown on the group following the series of
deadly attacks.
Dar Yasin
A Kashmiri Shiite family watches from a window
of their house as Shiite protesters shout slogans against the execution
of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, during a protest in Srinagar, Indian controlled
Kashmir, Saturday, Jan. 2, 2016.
The executions took place in the capital,
Riyadh, and 12 other cities and towns. Of those executed, 45 were Saudi
citizens, one was from Chad and another was from Egypt.
In announcing the verdicts, Saudi state
television showed mug shots of those executed. Al-Nimr was No. 46,
expressionless with a grey beard, his head covered with the
red-and-white scarf traditionally worn by men in the Arab Gulf region.
Al-Nimr, who was in his 50s, never denied the
political charges against him, but maintained he never carried weapons
or called for violence.
At his trial, he was asked if he disapproved
of the Al Saud ruling family because of speeches in which he spoke out
forcefully against former Interior Minister and late Crown Prince Nayef
bin Abdelaziz, who is King Salman's elder brother.
"If injustice stops against Shiites in the
east, then (at that point) I can have a different opinion," the cleric
responded, according to his brother Mohammed al-Nimr, who attended court
sessions and spoke to The Associated Press just days before the Oct.
2014 verdict.
U.S.-based Human Rights Watch's Middle East
director Sarah Leah said "regardless of the crimes allegedly committed,
executing prisoners in mass only further stains Saudi Arabia's troubling
human rights record." She said al-Nimr was convicted in an "unfair"
trial and that his execution "is only adding to the existing sectarian
discord and unrest."
Al-Nimr's brother told the AP by telephone
that the executions came as a "big shock" because "we thought the
authorities could adopt a political approach to settle matters without
bloodshed." He urged people to "adopt peaceful means when expressing
their anger."
Mohammed's son Ali, the cleric's nephew, is
also facing execution, but his name was not among those listed Saturday.
He was 17 years old in February 2012 when he was arrested. He was later
convicted, and his death sentenced upheld, on charges of attacking
security forces and taking part in protests, among other charges.
Saudi Arabia carried out at least 157
executions in 2015, with beheadings reaching their highest level in the
kingdom in two decades, according to human rights groups.
No comments:
Post a Comment