Sunday, 24 November 2024

Saudi Arabian Authority Executes Prince of the Royal Family

A prince from the Saudi royal family was executed on Tuesday for murdering a man during a brawl in the capital Riyadh, the Interior Ministry announced.
Photo used for illustrative purpose only
 
Saudi Arabia has taken the rare step of executing a member of its royal family after he was found guilty of murder, the Saudi Interior Ministry said in a statement.
 
Prince Turki bin Saud bin Turki bin Saud Al-Kabeer was convicted in the shooting death of a man during a"group quarrel," the statement said Tuesday, according to the state-run Saudi Press Agency.
 
The dead man was identified as a Saudi national.
 
The execution took place Tuesday. The statement did not include any details about the method of execution. In other cases in Saudi Arabia the death sentence has been carried out by beheading.
 
The guilty verdict was supported by an appeals court and later sanctioned by the Supreme Court of Saudi Arabia. A royal order was then issued to execute the courts' ruling, the press agency reported.
 
Report: 'Blood money' refused
 
The Saudi Gazette, an English-language newspaper based in Jeddah, said the victim's family had refused offers of "blood money" and demanded justice be carried out.
 
It is extremely uncommon for a member of the Saudi royal family to be put to death in Saudi Arabia. In 1975, Prince Faisal bin Musaid was beheaded for assassinating King Faisal.
 
"The government ... is keen to keep order, stabilize security and bring about justice through implementing the rules prescribed by Allah ... on whoever violates the sanctity of civilians," the Interior Ministry said.
 
King as 'enforcer'
 
The execution was "very rare," said Bruce Riedel, a senior fellow in the Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution. 
 
"This execution has been widely praised in the kingdom for establishing that the rule of law applies to everyone including royals," he told CNN.
 
"The King has been the enforcer of the royal family since his days as governor of Riyadh province where most royals live. He served in that position for a half century before becoming crown prince."
 
King Salman ascended to the throne in January 2015 following the death of his brother King Abdullah.
 
According to the rights group Amnesty International, at least 158 people were executed in Saudi Arabia in 2015, the highest recorded figure in the country since 1995. As of late May, at least 94 people had already been put to death this year, the group said.
 
Source: CNN.com

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