The kingdom has moved their cases to the Presidency of State Security government
agency, which deals with internal security matters, the rights group said on
Wednesday.
Saudi Arabia’s judicial proceedings are generally conducted in secret and it
remains unknown when the kingdom transferred these men to the new state agency.
The men were sentenced to death in 2016 on charges of "spying for Iran" after
what Amnesty International described as a "grossly unfair mass trial", the
Middle East Eye reported.
In December, the men's families learned that the Saudi Supreme Court upheld
their punishment, meaning they may be killed as soon as King Salman ratifies
their death sentences. Moving the cases to the Presidency of State Security
brings them one step closer to that ratification.
"Saudi Arabia is one of the world’s most prolific executioners and regularly
uses the death penalty as a political tool to crush dissent from the country’s
Shia minority, demonstrating its total contempt for the value of human life,”
said Heba Morayef, Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa
director.
According to Amnesty, 34 Saudi Shias are on death row, including four minors.
The Presidency of State Security agency was created in 2017 and is seen by
critics as a way for the king to consolidate power.
Executions in Saudi Arabia, most commonly in the form of beheadings, take place
following a decision by the king.
A UN report released in June said that the Persian Gulf kingdom was
systematically using its counterterrorism laws to suppress human rights
defenders.
"Those who peacefully exercise their right to freedom of expression are
systematically persecuted in Saudi Arabia,” the report said. "Many languish in
prison for years. Others have been executed after blatant miscarriages of
justice.”
Late last month, a group of United Nations experts also called on Riyadh to
suspend the pending executions of six people that were sentenced to death for
alleged crimes that took place while they were minors.
"Children should never be subject to the death penalty, this practice violates
an existing norm of customary international law and renders the punishment
tantamount to torture," the UN experts said.
Source:IQNA