DHAKA: At least 175 people have been executed in Saudi Arabia in the past year after unfair trials lacking basic safeguards.
Amnesty International says, reports the BBC on Tuesday.
A new report alleges the Gulf kingdom’s ‘faulty justice system facilitates judicial executions on a mass scale’.
In many cases, it adds, defendants are denied access to a lawyer and in some they are convicted on the basis of ‘confessions’ obtained under torture.
Those killed include juvenile offenders and people with mental disabilities.
Saudi Arabia adheres to a strict interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia, and applies the death penalty to a number of crimes not considered the ‘most serious’ under international norms. They include drug offences, apostasy, heresy and witchcraft.
Amnesty’s report says that between January 1985 and June 2015, at least 2,208 people were executed in Saudi Arabia.
BDST: 2027 HRS, AUG 25, 2015
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