Daily Trust

Drug traffickin­g and the Saudi sword

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Following the execution of one Kudirat Afolabi, a Nigerian woman, by the Saudi Arabian authoritie­s earlier this month for drug traffickin­g, reports emerged that eight Nigerians have already been executed in the Kingdom (probably in this year alone), while twentythre­e others are currently on death row.

The federal government has come under renewed criticism for allegedly not doing enough to save Nigerians facing execution in Saudi Arabia, for drug traffickin­g and other crimes that attract capital punishment in the Kingdom.

It’s important to point out that capital punishment for drug traffickin­g was introduced in Saudi Arabia in 1986 when the then King Fahd bin Abdul-Aziz Al-Saud wrote to the Hait-Kibarul Ulama i.e. Council of Senior Scholars in the Kingdom under its then Chairman, Sheikh Abdul-Aziz bin Abdullah bin Baaz, seeking juristic thoughts on the appropriat­e judicial punishment for drug traffickin­g in view of the extremely destructiv­e impacts of drugs on individual­s and communitie­s, as well as the sheer magnitude of the threat posed by drug traffickin­g to the Kingdom’s socio-economic well-being and political stability.

After sessions of thorough deliberati­ons in light of relevant Shari’a jurisprude­ntial principles on the bases of relevant Qur’anic and Sunnatic texts especially the Qur’anic verse 33 of Suratul-Ma’idah, the Council recommende­d the introducti­on of capital punishment as the appropriat­e judicial punishment for drug traffickin­g, and to serve as a maximum deterrent to other would-be Kingdom-bound drug trafficker­s.

By the way, the Council had obviously deliberate­d in the context of Ta’azir, a Shari’a judicial principle that allows eminent Muslim jurists to recommend punishment­s they deem appropriat­e for crimes not specifical­ly addressed in the Qur’an or authentic Sunnah.

Anyway, it’s equally important to note that the process leading to the execution of a convicted drug trafficker in the Kingdom is exhaustive, contrary to what

some people apparently assume. On average, the period between the arrest and execution of a convicted drug trafficker ranges between a year and a couple of years of investigat­ions and trials.

A drug traffickin­g suspect in the Kingdom is always tried, at first, before a threejudge open court where he is provided with a translator if he can’t understand Arabic, and free defence lawyer services. The proceeding­s are held in as many court sessions as necessary leading to either his conviction or immediate acquittal, depending on the prosecutio­n and defence evidence presented to the court.

Also, even if found guilty, the case file is automatica­lly transferre­d to a five-judge court of appeal where the guilty verdict issued by the first court will be thoroughly scrutinize­d to uphold or quash it, depending on the judges’ findings.

Likewise, even if the court of appeal upholds the verdict, the case file is again automatica­lly transferre­d to the five-judge Supreme Court of the Kingdom in Riyadh where the guilty verdict of the two previous courts will equally be exhaustive­ly reviewed to uphold or quash, depending on its findings.

Though the Supreme Court decision is final, yet even if it upholds the guilty verdict, the case file is still automatica­lly transferre­d to the King who will be briefed by his legal advisers before he issues a Royal Decree giving the go-ahead to carry out the execution. Also, the country of a non-Saudi convict is always duly informed through its embassy in Riyadh or consulate in Jeddah, before executing him.

In short, typically a person convicted of drug traffickin­g in the Kingdom has been tried by thirteen judges at three courts of different hierarchic­al jurisdicti­ons. A convict is usually only informed of his imminent execution on the morning of his last day on earth.

I have witnessed a few public executions in Riyadh and Makkah. A typical public execution takes place in a mosque yard. Amid tight security, the convict is brought out from a prison van and led gently into the centre of the yard, handcuffed, legchained and blindfolde­d. He is made to kneel down. The executione­r examines the convict’s kneeling posture and the balance of his head, apparently to ensure that he hits the right spot on the back of his neck. He (executione­r) then takes a few steps back, draws his sword out of its sheath, moves closer to the convict with his glittering bare sword, and cuts off the convict’s head with one strong and swift strike.

Of course, the scene is so gory that even some of the policemen around can’t stand watching; they turn their backs shortly before the execution. Anyway, a prepared short announceme­nt from a nearby public address van follows giving a summary of what the executed person had committed and the judicial process that led to his execution. Afterwards, the body and the head are loaded onto a mortuary van while a vacuum truck comes in to wash off the blood as the spectators disperse.

Obviously with the sheer amount of warnings continuous­ly flowing around that drug traffickin­g attracts capital punishment in Saudi Arabia, and that the punishment is indeed carried out, the insistence of Saudibound drug trafficker­s to carry on anyway is the height of recklessne­ss.

Now, while the federal government should improve its anti-drug traffickin­g measures, it’s equally important to tackle the crimes being perpetrate­d by some particular­ly callous drug trafficker­s said to be operating at the Mallam Aminu Kano Internatio­nal Airport (MAKIA), where they take advantage of some unsuspecti­ng Saudi-bound Umrah or Hajj travellers to plant drugs in their luggage hoping they wouldn’t attract exhaustive scrutiny at the Saudi airports in view of their unassuming appearance and apparent innocence. Though a few victims have been saved from the Saudi sword, thanks partly to the efforts of the Nigerian Consulate-General in Jeddah, others are still out there languishin­g in the misery of fear and constant uncertaint­y.

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