BSS
  27 Feb 2024, 20:32

Saudi executes seven for 'terrorism' offences: official media

RIYADH, Feb 27, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Saudi Arabia executed seven people for 
"terrorism" offences on Tuesday, state media said, the highest single-day 
figure since 81 were put to death in March 2022.

The seven were convicted of "creating and financing terrorist organisations 
and entities", the official Saudi Press Agency said, citing the Gulf 
kingdom's interior ministry.

Saudi Arabia, one of the world's most prolific users of capital punishment, 
has now executed 29 people this year according to an AFP tally of official 
announcements, after putting 170 to death in 2023.

The kingdom, notorious for beheadings, drew a wave of condemnation from 
around the world with 81 executions in one day nearly two years ago.

The nationalities of the seven executed on Tuesday were not revealed, but 
their names and titles indicated they were Saudi.

They were convicted of "adopting a terrorist approach that calls for 
bloodshed, establishing and financing terrorist organisations and entities, 
and communicating and dealing with them with the aim of disrupting the 
security and stability of society" and endangering national security, the 
official news agency said.

The report did not provide further details of the accusations against them.

In 2022, Saudi Arabia executed more people than any other country besides 
China and Iran, Amnesty International has said.

Those executed last year included 33 people accused of terrorism-related 
crimes and two soldiers convicted of treason.

There were 38 executions in December, the deadliest month in 2023.

Saudi authorities deem the executions to be necessary to "maintain public 
order" and compatible with their interpretation of sharia law, the Islamic 
law code based on the teachings of the Koran.

Activists say the kingdom's continued embrace of capital punishment hurts 
efforts by de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to transform the 
world's biggest crude oil exporter into a business and tourism hub.

Executions undermine the image of a more open, tolerant society that is 
central to Prince Mohammed's Vision 2030 reform agenda, activists argue.