Kuwait Times

Saudi executes three soldiers for ‘high treason’

-

Saudi Arabia yesterday executed three soldiers for “high treason”, the defense ministry said, in a rare public announceme­nt that accused them of colluding with an unspecifie­d enemy. The executions come as a Saudi-led military campaign intensifie­s in neighborin­g Yemen.

The soldiers were convicted of “the crime of high treason in cooperatio­n with the enemy” in a way that threatens the kingdom and its military interests, the ministry said in a statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency. The statement named the three soldiers - Mohammed bin Ahmed, Shaher bin Issa and Hamoud bin Ibrahim - without identifyin­g which enemy they were accused of aiding.

Saudi Arabia views Iran as its main regional foe and identifies Yemen’s Tehran-aligned Houthi rebels as a major security threat to the oil-rich kingdom. The statement makes a rare announceme­nt of military executions in the kingdom, which is known to be highly secretive about its armed forces.

“The fact that the names of the decedents were publicized means the Saudis must consider their alleged misconduct to be exceptiona­lly egregious and thus worthy of exemplary punishment,” David Des Roches, from the Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies in Washington, told AFP.

The defense ministry said the soldiers were executed in the military’s Southern Command, based close to the border with Yemen, where Saudi Arabia is leading a six-year campaign against the Houthi rebels. Riyadh led a military coalition into Yemen in March 2015 to prop up the internatio­nally recognized government, but it has struggled to oust the Houthis. It has also faced a surge in missile and drone attacks against the kingdom.

Fighting has intensifie­d for the key Yemeni region of Marib, with 53 pro-government and

Houthi rebel fighters dead in the past 24 hours, loyalist military officials said yesterday. The Houthis have been trying to seize oil-rich Marib, the government’s last significan­t pocket of territory in the north, since February.

The kingdom has long faced criticism for one of the world’s highest rates of executions and what human rights campaigner­s call an opaque judicial system. But earlier this year, the government-backed Human Rights Commission (HRC) reported a sharp drop in executions in 2020, as the kingdom seeks to blunt internatio­nal criticism of its human rights record.

The HRC said it documented 27 executions in 2020, a decrease of 85 percent over the previous year, due in part to a moratorium on the death penalty for drug-related offences. Since the beginning of this year, Saudi Arabia has carried out the death penalty against 20 people, according to a tally based on official figures published by state media.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait