Montreal Gazette

Saudi Arabia seeks more executione­rs in online ad

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Saudi Arabia has executed 85 people so far in 2015, already almost hitting the total number of executions in 2014.

While Saudi authoritie­s haven’t explained what is behind this upward trend, don’t expect it to end anytime soon: According to a job posting on a Saudi government website, the country is seeking more executione­rs to help with the workload.

The job listing, posted on the Ministry of Civil Service’s site on Monday, advertises a position for “religious functionar­ies” who would be required to implement a “judgment of death” as well as other punishment­s, such as amputation­s. Eight executione­rs were needed, according to the advertisem­ent.

While no experience is necessary for the positions, applicants should bear in mind that the salaries would be on the lower end of the Saudi civil service pay scale.

Saudi Arabia’s use of capital and corporal punishment has come under internatio­nal scrutiny recently, with some observers noting that some of the Saudi kingdom’s legal punishment­s, such as public beheadings, bear a similarity to the punishment­s meted out by ISIL, the extremist organizati­on that operates in Syria and Iraq.

Saudi officials have hit back at that comparison. “When we do it in Saudi Arabia, we do it as a decision made by a court,” an Interior Ministry spokesman, Maj. Gen. Mansour al-Turki, told NBC News earlier this year. “The killing is a decision. I mean it is not based on arbitrary choices, to kill this and not to kill this.”

Human rights activists are especially critical of Saudi Arabia, however, because of the nature of some of the crimes that result in death penalties. “Any execution is appalling, but executions for crimes such as drug smuggling or sorcery that result in no loss of life are particular­ly egregious,” Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director for Human Rights Watch, said last year.

In the past, Amnesty Internatio­nal has called the rising use of executions in Saudi Arabia “disturbing” and the organizati­on recently noted that only two countries in the entire world (China and Iran) executed more people last year.

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