Four more Saudi Arabia executions brings total to 100 since start of year

Three executions coincide with visit by UK’s Boris Johnson to Riyadh to lobby for rise in oil output

An honor guard member is covered by the flag of Saudi Arabia, in Washington, on March 22, 2018. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)
An honor guard member is covered by the flag of Saudi Arabia, in Washington, on March 22, 2018. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia put four people to death on Thursday, bringing to 100 the number of executions since the start of the year, according to an AFP tally based on official statements.

The latest executions reported by the official Saudi Press Agency come amid fresh condemnation of the kingdom’s human rights record after 81 people were put to death in a single day last week.

Of the 100 executions, three on Wednesday coincided with a visit by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who was in Riyadh to lobby for a rise in oil output to help stabilize markets following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

On Saturday, Saudi Arabia’s execution of 81 people in one day — on various charges, including terrorism-related offenses — exceeded the total of 69 killed in the whole of 2021.

Human Rights Watch said it was “highly unlikely” that the 81 men received fair trials, calling it a “brutal show of its autocratic rule.”

More than half of them, 41, belonged to the kingdom’s Shiite Muslim minority “who have long suffered systemic discrimination and violence by the government,” the New York-based rights group said.

Saudi Arabia said the men, who included seven Yemenis and one Syrian, belonged to the Islamic State group, al-Qaeda, Yemen’s Houthi rebels or “other terrorist organizations.”

Prime Minister Boris Johnson (C) with Saudi Energy Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman (L) on March 16, 2022, tours the manufacturing facility at the Saudi Basic Industries (SABIC) headquarters in the capital Riyadh, where the firm announced it would invest 850 million British sterling pounds to reopen their hydrocarbons ‘cracker’ at Wilton and decarbonize their operations in the north east. (Stefan Rousseau / POOL / AFP)

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