UN Rights Office Alarmed At Increasing Rate Of Executions
UN Rights Office Alarmed At Increasing Rate Of Executions
New York, Jan 6 2012 11:10AM
The United Nations human rights office expressed alarm today at the significant increase in Saudi Arabia’s use of capital punishment in the past year.
According to the Office
of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), the
number of executions in the country almost tripled last year
compared with 2010.
“We call on the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia to respect international standards guaranteeing
due process and the protection of the rights of those facing
the death penalty, to progressively restrict the use of the
death penalty and to reduce the number of offences for which
it may be imposed,” OHCHR spokesperson Rupert Colville
<"http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=11751&LangID=E">told
reporters in Geneva.
“What is even more worrying is
that court proceedings often reportedly fall far short of
international fair trial standards, and the use of torture
as a means to obtain confessions appears to be rampant,”
Mr. Colville added.
Saudi Arabia applies the death
penalty for a wide range of offences, including the charge
of sorcery and witchcraft, for which a woman was executed
last month.
OHCHR also expressed grave concern at the
recent sentencing of six men convicted on charges of highway
robbery. The men were condemned to “cross amputation”
– a form of punishment which involves the amputation of
the men’s right hands and left feet.
“We call on
the authorities to halt the use of such cruel, inhuman,
degrading punishment,” Mr. Colville continued, noting that
as a party to the Convention against Torture, Saudi Arabia
is “bound by the absolute prohibition” against the use
of torture and other forms of cruel punishment.
Last
October, OHCHR voiced deep distress over the execution of 10
men who were publicly beheaded in the country’s capital,
Riyadh, while underscoring that about 140 of the 193 UN
Member States are now believed to have either abolished the
death penalty or introduced a
moratorium.
ends