The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia exe­cut­ed 81 peo­ple on March 12, 2022, the largest mass exe­cu­tion in the mod­ern his­to­ry of the coun­try, elic­it­ing out­rage from United Nations and non-gov­ern­men­tal human rights organizations. 

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet issued a state­ment March 14 say­ing that the exe­cu­tions did not con­form to inter­na­tion­al human rights and human­i­tar­i­an law and may amount to a war crime.” I con­demn Saudi Arabia’s mass exe­cu­tion,” she said.

Saudi author­i­ties assert­ed that the pris­on­ers, who had been tried in spe­cial Saudi ter­ror­ism courts, had been able to exer­cise their full rights under Saudi law.” A state­ment released by the Saudi Ministry of the Interior claimed that the pris­on­ers had com­mit­ted mul­ti­ple heinous crimes that left a large num­ber of civil­ians and law enforce­ment offi­cers dead,” includ­ing the mur­der­ing of inno­cent men, women and chil­dren” and alle­giance to for­eign terrorist organisations.” 

However, the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights report­ed that 41 mem­bers of the minor­i­ty Shia Muslim com­mu­ni­ty who had tak­en part in anti-gov­ern­ment protests had been exe­cut­ed, as well as sev­en Yemeni nation­als and one Syrian detained in con­nec­tion with the Saudi government’s mil­i­tary inter­ven­tions in their coun­tries. The European Saudi Organisation for Human Rights (ESOHR) said that it found mul­ti­ple cas­es in which defen­dants had been denied access to a lawyer, were tor­tured into sign­ing con­fes­sions, and been unable to com­mu­ni­cate with the outside world.

ESOHR direc­tor Ali Adubusi said the charges against many of the accused involved not a drop of blood” and none of the cas­es involved charges that war­rant­ed exe­cu­tion under Saudi Arabia’s pub­lic cri­te­ria for the death penal­ty. The orga­ni­za­tion said it was unable to track the charges in all of the cas­es because of a lack of trans­paren­cy in the Saudi jus­tice sys­tem and gov­ern­ment efforts to intim­i­date fam­i­ly mem­bers of the accused. These exe­cu­tions are the oppo­site of jus­tice,” Adubusi said.

The exe­cu­tions came as Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman had been tout­ing social reforms in the Kingdom, includ­ing pledges by the Saudi gov­ern­ment to end cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment for drug offens­es and to no longer exe­cute juve­nile offend­ers. Each time, the promis­es were fol­lowed by addi­tion­al exe­cu­tions. Following the mass exe­cu­tion, Soraya Bauwens, the deputy direc­tor of the London-based human rights orga­ni­za­tion, Reprieve, said: The world should know that when Mohammed bin Salman promis­es reform, blood­shed is bound to follow.”

High Commissioner Bachelet said U.N. mon­i­tor­ing indi­cates that some of those exe­cut­ed were sen­tenced to death fol­low­ing tri­als that did not meet fair tri­al and due process guar­an­tees, and for crimes that did not appear to meet the most seri­ous crimes thresh­old, as required under inter­na­tion­al law.” Reprieve was more blunt, call­ing the mass exe­cu­tion a bru­tal dis­play of impunity.” 

Lynn Maalouf, Amnesty Internationals deputy region­al direc­tor for the Middle East and North Africa, said This exe­cu­tion spree is all the more chill­ing in light of Saudi Arabia’s deeply flawed jus­tice sys­tem, which metes out death sen­tences fol­low­ing tri­als that are gross­ly and bla­tant­ly unfair, includ­ing bas­ing ver­dicts on con­fes­sions’ extract­ed under tor­ture or oth­er ill-treat­ment.“ The mass exe­cu­tion, Amnesty said in a web post, sig­nals an appalling esca­la­tion in Saudi Arabia’s use of the death penalty.”

Human Rights Watch issued a news release stat­ing that “[r]ampant and sys­temic abus­es in Saudi Arabia’s crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem sug­gest it is high­ly unlike­ly that any of the men received a fair tri­al.“ The organization’s deputy Middle East direc­tor, Michael Page, called the Saudi mass exe­cu­tions a bru­tal show of its autocratic rule.“

Today’s unprece­dent­ed shock­ing mass exe­cu­tions in what we know to be sham tri­als under sham laws in Saudi Arabia should dis­pel any mythol­o­gy about [Crown Prince bin Salman’s] trans­form­ing into some kind of reformer,’” Sarah Leah Whiston, exec­u­tive direc­tor of the non­prof­it Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN) said in a March 12 press advi­so­ry. DAWN was found­ed by the late jour­nal­ist Jamal Khashoggi to pro­mote democ­ra­cy, the rule of law, and human rights in the Middle East and North Africa. Khashoggi was mur­dered and dis­mem­bered by Saudi assas­sins after being lured to the Saudi con­sulate in Istanbul in 2018. U.S. intel­li­gence agen­cies con­clud­ed that bin Salman ordered the killing. 

ESOHR report­ed that this was fourth mass exe­cu­tion by Saudi author­i­ties in the past decade. The March 2022 mass exe­cu­tion, ESOHR said, was pre­ced­ed by two mas­sacres in 2016” in which a total of 47 peo­ple were behead­ed, and the behead­ings of 37 peo­ple in 2019. The March 2022 mass exe­cu­tion was report­ed­ly the largest in mod­ern Saudi his­to­ry, sur­pass­ing the January 1980 mass exe­cu­tion of 63 mil­i­tants con­vict­ed of seiz­ing the Grand Mosque in Mecca in 1979.

The mass exe­cu­tions exceed­ed in one day the 67 exe­cu­tions Saudi author­i­ties car­ried out in all of 2021 and the 27 Saudi exe­cu­tions in 2020. Amnesty said the exe­cu­tions brought Saudi Arabia’s total of exe­cu­tions to 92 so far in 2022.

The Saudi inte­ri­or min­istry did not dis­close the man­ner in which the gov­ern­ment con­duct­ed the executions.

Citation Guide
Sources

Vivian Yee, Saudi Arabia Puts 81 to Death, Despite Promises to Curb Executions, The New York Times, March 12, 2022; Stephen Kalin and Summer Said, Saudi Arabia Puts 81 People to Death in Its Largest Execution Ever, The Wall Street Journal, March 12, 2022; Jon Gambrell, Saudi Arabia puts 81 to death in its largest mass exe­cu­tion, Associated Press, March 12, 2022; Euronews, Saudi Arabia car­ries out mass exe­cu­tion of 81 inmates, biggest in mod­ern his­to­ry, Euronews, March 12, 2022; Aljazeera, Saudi Arabia exe­cutes 81 peo­ple in a sin­gle day, Aljazeera, March 12, 2022. Press Advisory, Saudi Arabia Executed 81 in an Unprecedented Number of Mass Executions in the Modern History of the Arabian Peninsula, Democracy for the Arab World Now, March 12, 2022; The third and largest mass exe­cu­tion mas­sacre dur­ing the reign of King Salman and his son, European Saudi organ­i­sa­tion for Human Rights, March 12, 2022; Comment by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on the exe­cu­tion of 81 peo­ple in Saudi Arabia, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner on Human Rights, March 14, 2022; Saudi Arabia: Mass exe­cu­tion of 81 men shows urgent need to abol­ish the death penal­ty, Amnesty International, March 15, 2022; Saudi Arabia: Mass Execution of 81 Men, Human Rights Watch, March 15, 2022; Julian E. Barnes and David E. Sanger, Saudi Crown Prince Is Held Responsible for Khashoggi Killing in U.S. Report, New York Times, February 26, 2021, updat­ed July 172021.