
Saudi Arabia executing foreigners, drug offenders at record pace: Amnesty
Saudi Arabia executed 345 people last year, the highest number ever recorded by Amnesty in over three decades of reporting. In the first six months of this year alone, 180 people have been put to death, the group said, signalling that record likely will again be broken.
This year, about two-thirds of those executed were convicted on non-lethal drug charges, the activist group Reprieve said separately. Amnesty also has raised similar concerns about executions in drug cases.
Saudi Arabia has not offered any comment on why it increasingly employs the death penalty.
It is one of several countries in the Middle East, including Iran, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, that can levy the death penalty on drug-related charges. But the kingdom remains one of the world's top executioners behind only China and Iran — whose execution numbers are often hard to accurately gauge — and its use of executions in drug cases appears to be fuelling that.
Short-lived moratorium on drug-related executions
Amnesty documented the cases of 25 foreign nationals who are currently on death row, or were recently executed, in Saudi Arabia for drug-related offences.
More than half of those executed this year in the kingdom were foreign nationals, according to Reprieve.
One such national, Egyptian Essam Ahmed, disappeared in 2021 while working on a fishing boat in Sinai. A month later, his family received word he had been detained in Saudi Arabia and sentenced to death for drug trafficking. Ahmed claims he was forced by the boat's owner to carry a package for him at gunpoint.
"We're living in terror, we're scared every morning," said a member of Ahmed's family, who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity fearing his comments could impact the case. "Every morning until 9 a.m., we're afraid that they took one of them for execution without us knowing."
Ahmed's story is all-too common, Amnesty said, in a country where an estimated 76 per cent of the workforce is comprised of migrant workers.
"Low-wage migrant workers caught in Saudi Arabia's 'war on drugs' possess little capital to prevent their exploitation at the hands of experienced, fraudulent agents or to afford legal representation that would effectively defend their rights once in Saudi Arabia and facing the death penalty."
In 2021, as part of the crown prince's criminal justice overhaul, Saudi Arabia's Human Rights Commission announced a moratorium on drug-related executions. The moratorium, however, remained in place for just under three years, before it was scrapped without an explanation.
Before that period, Amnesty documented that 76 per cent of the 202 people executed for drug-related offences between 2017 and 2019 were migrant workers.
In a 10-year period review, migrant workers from Pakistan were the most likely to be executed solely for drug-related offences, a total of 155, with 69 migrant workes from Syria and 50 from Jordan executed for drug offences.
Crackdowns continue despite modernization
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia's day-to-day ruler, highlighted in 2022 that he limited the use of capital punishment to just homicide cases.
"About the death penalty, we got rid of all of it, except for one category, and this one is written in the Qur'an, and we cannot do anything about it, even if we wished to do something, because it is clear teaching in the Qur'an," the prince told The Atlantic.
The executions come as the kingdom continues to undertake bold reforms to diversify its economy as part of its Vision 2030 initiative.
Human rights groups for years have been critical of Saudi Arabia's human rights record. There have been rapid societal changes in Saudi Arabia under King Salman and the crown prince, with women entering the workforce in increasing numbers and also now being allowed to drive.
But the kingdom has also overseen the arrest of women's rights activists, including former University of British Columbia student Loujain al-Hathloul, who was detained for three years.
Saudi Arabia also has imprisoned businessmen, royals and others in a crackdown on corruption that soon resembled a shakedown of the kingdom's most powerful people.
Jeed Basyouni, who directs Britain-based legal non-profit Reprieve's Middle East and North Africa program, insisted Prince Mohammed could change Saudi Arabia's execution policy rapidly if he wanted.
"He could do mass pardons. He could insist on rewriting laws so that they are in line with international law," Basyouni said. "The billions spent on so-called reforms, designed to promote a more tolerant and inclusive kingdom under the crown prince's rule, mask an authoritarian state where daily executions for drug crimes are now the norm."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
2 days ago
- CTV News
Iran executes 2 opposition members over alleged attacks on civilian sites
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran said Sunday it has executed two members of the exiled opposition group Mujahedeen-e-Khalq after convicting them of carrying out attacks on public and civilian infrastructure. The judiciary's official news website, Mizan Online, reported that Behrouz Ehsani Eslamlou and Mehdi Hasani were hanged on Sunday morning after being found guilty of using improvised mortar launchers to target residential areas, educational institutions and government buildings. The report said Eslamlou had a long history with the group, dating back to the 1980s. He was previously imprisoned, rejoining the group after his release. Mizan said he was arrested while trying to cross the border into Turkiye. Authorities said they found firearms, ammunition, materials for assembling mortars and tools for changing his appearance in his possession. The semi-official Tasnim news agency added that Eslamlou had been tasked by group leaders based in Albania to return to Iran and organize underground terror cells. His mission, according to the report, included training and directing attacks against both government and civilian targets. State media reported that the two were involved in acts of vandalism against public property, gathering intelligence, filming their activities and sending the footage for dissemination through the group's affiliated media networks. Iranian courts charged the men with several offenses, including waging war against the state, conspiracy, sabotage and membership in a terrorist organization. Prosecutors accused them of plotting to destabilize national security and damage public property. The Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, once a Marxist-Islamist group that opposed Iran's monarchy, backed the 1979 Islamic Revolution but later broke with Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's government. It carried out a series of deadly bombings and assassinations in the 1980s and supported Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq war — stances that still provoke widespread resentment within Iran. The group is now largely based in Albania but claims to operate a clandestine network inside Iran. The last known execution of Mujahedeen-e-Khalq members before Sunday took place in 2009, following their conviction in connection with an attempted bombing in Tehran's central Enghelab Square. The Associated Press

CTV News
3 days ago
- CTV News
U.S. military kills ISIS leader in Syria
This September 2024 photo shows U.S. forces patrolling oil fields in Syria. The U.S. military killed a senior ISIS leader in a raid in Syria on July 25, as well as two of his ISIS-affiliated sons. (Delil Souleiman/AFP/Getty Images/File via CNN Newsource) The U.S. military killed a senior ISIS leader in a raid in Syria on Friday, as well as two of his ISIS-affiliated sons, according to a release from U.S. Central Command. The senior leader, Dhiya' Zawba Muslih al-Hardani, as well as his two adult sons, Abdallah Dhiya al-Hardani and Abd al-Rahman Dhiya Zawba al-Hardani, 'posed a threat to U.S. and coalition forces, as well as the new Syrian Government,' the CENTCOM release said. Three children and three women who were on-site were unharmed. Few other details about the raid were provided. While the U.S. has conducted anti-ISIS missions with partner forces without some regularity over recent months and years, it is less common for U.S. forces to conduct ground raid operations instead of airstrikes. 'We will continue to relentlessly pursue ISIS terrorists wherever they operate,' CENTCOM commander Gen. Erik Kurilla said in the release. 'ISIS terrorists are not safe where they sleep, where they operate, and where they hide.' Over recent months and years, the U.S. has continued supporting and conducting anti-ISIS missions with partner and coalition forces in Syria and Iraq. In May, the U.S. military supported six operations — five in Iraq, one in Syria — which resulted in the death of two ISIS operatives and the detention of two others, including an ISIS leader, CENTCOM said last month. In March, the U.S. military conducted a precision airstrike in Iraq and killed Abdallah Makki Muslih al-Rifai, the terror group's chief of operations and Delegated Committee Emir, and one other ISIS operative. The U.S. announced it was beginning a withdrawal of roughly half its forces in Syria in April, which the Pentagon said was a sign of the 'significant steps' made towards degrading ISIS capabilities in the region. Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said at the time that the U.S. military would ultimately have less than a thousand U.S. forces in the country as a result. Friday's raid comes just weeks after the Trump administration said it was revoking the foreign terrorist organization designation of Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), the group once led by Syria's interim president. It also comes after U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order officially ending U.S. sanctions on Syria. By Haley Britzky, CNN


CBC
4 days ago
- CBC
Thai PM says dispute with Cambodia could 'escalate into a state of war'
Social Sharing Thailand and Cambodia exchanged heavy artillery fire for a second day on Friday as their worst fighting in over a decade intensified and spread to new areas, despite international calls for a ceasefire. At least 16 people have been killed and tens of thousands displaced in the escalating border battle. Both sides have blamed each other for starting the conflict and on Friday ratcheted up the rhetoric, with Thailand accusing Cambodia of deliberately targeting civilians and Cambodia alleging Thailand was using cluster munitions, a controversial and widely condemned ordnance. Thailand's acting prime minister Phumtham Wechayachai said Cambodia had launched attacks on multiple fronts and that Thailand was defending its territory against "acts of intrusion and aggression that are causing harm to the people's lives." "The situation has intensified and could escalate into a state of war. At present, it's a confrontation involving heavy weapons," he told reporters. The UN Security Council is scheduled to hold an emergency meeting on the crisis later Friday in New York. Fighting in more locations Friday Fighting re-erupted before dawn, with clashes reported in 12 locations, up from six on Thursday, according to Thailand's military, which accused Cambodia of using artillery and Russian-made BM-21 rocket systems to target areas that included schools and hospitals. The Thai military described Cambodia's bombardment as "appalling attacks," putting the blame squarely on the Phnom Penh government, which it said was being led by Hun Sen, the influential former premier of nearly four decades and father of current Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet. "The deliberate targeting of civilians is a war crime, and those responsible must be brought to justice," the Thai military added. More than 130,000 people have been evacuated from conflict areas in Thailand, where the death toll rose to 15 as of early Friday, 14 of those civilians, according to the health ministry. It said 46 people were wounded, including 15 soldiers. Cambodia's national government has provided no details on casualties or evacuations and did not respond to requests for comment on Friday. An official from Cambodia's Oddar Meanchey province said one civilian had been killed and five wounded, with 1,500 families evacuated. The fighting started early on Thursday, quickly escalating from small arms fire to heavy shelling in multiple areas 210 kilometres apart along a frontier where sovereignty has been disputed for more than a century. The trigger was Thailand's recalling of its ambassador to Phnom Penh and expulsion of Cambodia's envoy on Wednesday, in response to a second Thai soldier losing a limb to a landmine that Bangkok alleged had been laid recently by rival troops. Cambodia has dismissed that as baseless. Cambodia's defence ministry and its government's landmine authority condemned what they said was Thailand's use of a large amount of cluster munitions, calling it a violation of international law. Thailand, not among the signatories to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Thailand rules out mediation Reuters journalists in Thailand's Surin province saw a Thai military convoy that included about a dozen trucks, armoured vehicles and tanks cut across provincial roads ringed by paddy fields as it moved toward the border. Intermittent bursts of explosions could be heard amid a heavy presence of armed troops. Soldiers marshalled traffic on a rural road along which artillery guns were being loaded and fired in succession, emitting orange flashes followed by loud explosions and grey smoke. More evacuees arrived at shelters in Surin province, fleeing their homes after hearing the booms of shelling. "We heard very loud explosions, so we came here. We were so scared," said Aung Ying Yong, 67, wiping away her tears with a towel. "So many people are in trouble because of this war ... we are very sad that we have to live like this." The United States, a longtime treaty ally of Thailand, called for an immediate cessation of hostilities, as did Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, the chair of the regional bloc ASEAN, who said he had spoken to leaders of both countries and urged them to find a peaceful way out. But Thailand's foreign ministry said on Friday it has rejected mediation efforts from third countries after offers to facilitate dialogue from the United States, China and Malaysia, "We stand by our position that bilateral mechanism is the best way out," foreign ministry spokesperson Nikorndej Balankura told Reuters in an interview. WATCH l Recap of Thursday's hostilities: Thailand and Cambodia clash in a deadly border dispute 1 day ago Thailand had on Thursday mobilized an F-16 fighter jet in a rare combat deployment, which carried out an airstrike on a Cambodian military target, among measures Cambodia called "reckless and brutal military aggression" in its appeal for the UN Security Council to address the issue. Thailand's use of an F-16 underlines its military advantage over Cambodia, which has no fighter aircraft and significantly less defence hardware and personnel.