First beheading under new Saudi king stirs attention | Inquirer News

First beheading under new Saudi king stirs attention

/ 09:00 AM January 27, 2015

In this Sunday, Jan. 25, 2015 photo provided by the Saudi Press Agency, Saudi Arabia's Interior Minister Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, left, Crown Prince Muqrin bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, center, and newly enthroned King Salman, right, receive dignitaries who arrived to give their condolences for Saudi King Abdullah, who died early Friday at age 90, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (AP Photo/SPA)

Newly enthroned Saudi King Salman, right, receives a dignitary on January 25, 2015. At left is Saudi Arabia’s Interior Minister Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, left, and Crown Prince Muqrin bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, center. AP

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Saudi Arabia on Monday executed a man convicted of raping several girls in a case that has captured the kingdom’s attention and marks the first beheading carried out under the newly enthroned King Salman.

The Interior Ministry said Moussa al-Zahrani was executed in the city of Jeddah. The ministry statement, carried by the official Saudi Press Agency, said al-Zahrani was convicted of luring underage girls, intoxicating them, forcing them to watch pornographic videos and then physically and sexually assaulting them.

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His alleged victims were children assaulted in 2011 in a string of attacks in Jeddah.

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The case has caused a stir on social media — which is unusual in Saudi Arabia for cases of violent crimes — in part because al-Zahrani claimed his innocence throughout the trial and two later appeals.

Last year, al-Zahrani appealed in a 20-minute video for Saudi King Abdullah, who died on Friday, to intervene. In the widely-viewed video, the 45-year-old Arabic teacher claimed he was framed by police and that a man — a neighbor of 10 years — who accused him of molesting his daughter was also a police investigator in the case.

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An Arabic hashtag on Twitter, “We are all Moussa al-Zahrani” garnered thousands of comments by Saudis with conflicting opinions over the case.

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Al-Zahrani’s relatives appeared on Saudi talk shows, saying the case was riddled with inconsistencies and that the judiciary did not weigh all the evidence. They claimed a medical report found the investigator’s 10 year-old daughter had not been assaulted and that several cases of assault against young girls took place in Jiddah while al-Zahrani was already jailed.

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His brother, Hassan al-Zahrani told The Associated Press after the execution that his brother, a father of six, could not have committed the crimes he was convicted of.

Saudi Arabia, which has one of the highest execution rates in the world, follows a strict interpretation of Islamic law and applies the death penalty for crimes such as murder, rape and witchcraft.

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TAGS: beheading, King Abdullah, King Salman, Saudi Arabia

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