A Nigerian, Fahd bin Bakr bin Mohammed Hawsawi, has been executed by Saudi
authorities, after convicting him of
murdering a policeman.
It was 95th
execution of the year in the ultra-conservative Muslim kingdom, which
imposes the death penalty for offences including murder, drug
trafficking, armed robbery, rape and apostasy.
Hawsawi was put to death in the western city of Taif,
the interior ministry said in a statement carried by the official SPA
news agency.
He had been
found guilty of strangling the policeman and beating his head against
the ground until he died, the ministry said.
Amnesty
International has warned that at the current rate Saudi Arabia could
see more than 100 executions in the first half of 2016 alone.
The
London-based watchdog says that the kingdom carried out at least 158
death sentences last year, making it the third most prolific
executioner after Iran and Pakistan. Its figures do not include
secretive China.
The executions
this year are “higher than at the same point last year,” Amnesty
said.
Murder and drug
trafficking cases account for the majority of Saudi executions,
although 47 people were put to death for “terrorism” offences on
a single day in January.
They included
prominent Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr whose execution prompted Iranian
protesters to torch Saudi diplomatic missions triggering the severing
of relations between the Middle East’s leading Sunni and Shiite
powers.
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