Updated October 2018
While the western media focuses on the changes that have taken place in Saudi Arabian society as control in the royal family morphs, a recent press release by Human Rights Watch shows us that "the more things change, the more they stay the same" in the world's largest oil producer.
While the western media focuses on the changes that have taken place in Saudi Arabian society as control in the royal family morphs, a recent press release by Human Rights Watch shows us that "the more things change, the more they stay the same" in the world's largest oil producer.
Let's look at a bit of background on
one of America's two best friends in the Middle East, a nation that was
recently the beneficiary of a deal for $100 billion worth of U.S.-sourced military arms.
In January 2015, 79 year-old Prince Salman bin Adbul Aziz Al Saud acceded
to the Saudi throne after the death of King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz. The
new leader appointed his son, 29 year-old Muhammed bin Salman (MBS) as the
country's Minister of Defense; one of his first acts as Minister was to start a
war in Yemen in March 2015, a conflict that has ground on with little sign of
resolution for three years, unless of course you call the starvation and deaths
of thousands of Yemenis "a success". In June 2017, after being appointed Crown Prince and heir to the Saudi throne by his father, MBS
spearheaded a regional move against Qatar, a nation that he accused of sponsoring
terrorism and meddling in its neighbours' affairs.
One of his most important actions took
place in 2016 when Prince Muhammed bin Salman announced a plan to bring social
and economic changes to the kingdom and end its addiction to oil. Saudi Vision 2030 was
introduced as follows:
The plan for Saudi Arabia's future
includes three pillars:
While the Western media focussed on the
privatization program, particularly the privatization of Saudi Aramco and the
fact that Saudi Arabia is seeking to diversify its sources of revenue away from
oil, there are underlying issues that show that the Saudi royal family is only
willing to make changes that do not threaten their way of life, particularly
through the nation's religious bedrock; Wahhabism:
The Saudi royal family is only too
aware that when regime change takes place in the Middle East, it often results
in painful and permanent changes to existing leadership. While he may be
proposing a move toward religious moderation, the nation is still firmly
entrenched in a top-down ruling model backed by its Wahhabist faith.
While Muhammad bin Salman has been
lauded by the Western media for his role in modest social changes in Saudi
Arabia including ending the ban on women drivers starting in
June 2018, it is pretty obvious to outsiders (those who also live outside of
Washington, D.C.) that the nation has a significant human rights problem that
gets little press time since it doesn't fit Washington's narrative about one of
its key allies in the Middle East. In an interesting interview on 60 Minutes, MBS stated the following when asked
about human rights abuses in Saudi Arabia:
"Saudi Arabia believes in many of
the principles of human rights. In fact, we believe in the notion of human
rights, but ultimately Saudi standards are not the same as American standards.
I don't want to say that we don't have shortcomings. We certainly do. But
naturally, we are working to mend these shortcomings."
Now, let's go back to the beginning of
this posting. Human Rights Watch recently posted the
following:
"Saudi Arabia has executed
48 people since the beginning of 2018, half of them for nonviolent drug crimes,
Human Rights Watch said today. Many more people convicted of drug crimes remain
on death row following convictions by Saudi Arabia’s notoriously unfair
criminal justice system.
Saudi Arabia has carried out nearly 600
executions since the beginning of 2014, over 200 of them in drug cases. The
vast majority of the remainder were for murder, but other offenses included
rape, incest, terrorism, and “sorcery.”
In Saudi Arabia, death sentences for
murder are usually based on the Islamic law principle qisas, or eye-for-an-eye
retributive punishment, while judges hand down death sentences for drugs at
their own discretion (the Islamic law principle ta’zir). Judges rely on a 1987
fatwa by the country’s Council of Senior Religious Scholars prescribing the
death penalty for any “drug smuggler” who brings drugs into the country, as
well as provisions of the 2005 Law on Combatting Narcotic Drugs and
Psychotropic Substances, which prescribes the death penalty for drug smuggling.
The law allows for mitigated sentences in limited circumstances.
International standards, including the
Arab Charter on Human Rights, ratified by Saudi Arabia, require countries that
retain the death penalty to use it only for the “most serious crimes,” and in
exceptional circumstances. In 2012, the United Nations special rapporteur on
extrajudicial, summary, or arbitrary executions stated that where used, the
death penalty should be limited to cases in which a person is intentionally
killed and not used to punish drug-related offenses." (my bold)
The Cornell Center on the Death Penalty
Worldwide finds the following about Saudi Arabia and the methods
it uses for execution and the types of crimes that can be punished on a permanent basis:
"Beheading: Sources indicate
that public beheading is probably the common method of execution in Saudi
Arabia. The condemned are sedated prior to execution.
Stoning: Public stoning can be used to
execute individuals who have been convicted of acts such as adultery. The
condemned are sedated prior to execution.
There are reports that at least one
execution in January 2009 and two in 2008 may have taken place by shooting. Over
the past few years, reported executions have been almost exclusively by
beheading, despite the prevalence of media discussion of the possibility of
death by stoning. There are reports that Saudis have exposed the body (with
head sewn back on) of the condemned to public indignity, including crucifixion,
after execution for the crime of highway robbery resulting in death."
Saudi law allows for the death penalty
in the following crimes: aggravated murder, murder, killing without
intent, terrorism-related offences resulting in death, terrorism-related
offences not resulting in death, rape not resulting in death, robbery not resulting
in death, arson not resulting in death, burglary not resulting in death, drug
trafficking not resulting in death, drug trafficking resulting in death, drug
possession, adultery, apostasy, consensual sexual relations between adults of
the same sex, treason, espionage, recidivist consumption of intoxicants,
sorcery and witchcraft.
The death penalty is mandatory for
cases of murder, aggravated murder, killing without intent, terrorism-related
offences that result in death, terrorism-related offences not resulting in
death, rape not resulting in death, drug trafficking resulting in death,
adultery, consensual sexual relations between adults of the same sex and
treason.
As you can see from this posting,
despite the assurances of the Western media and Muhammad bin Salman, it looks
like Saudi Arabia's relationship with the death penalty is unlikely to change
any time soon given the close link between the nation's religious life and its
legal system. It is interesting to see that, despite Saudi Arabia's
obvious abuse of the most basic of human rights, Washington is able to avert
its eyes when it comes to the bad behaviour of its second-best friend in the
Middle East at the same time that it criticizes other nations like Syria for human rights issues.
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