A Saudi Arabian court on April 21 sentenced three people to death for their roles in attacks on expatriate resident compounds [4] in Riyadh in May 2003, bringing the total death sentences to eight. Another 77 people have been sentenced to prison terms [5] ranging from two to 35 years by the court, which was created to handle terrorism cases. The 2003 attacks, in which blasts at three residential compounds in Riyadh left 35 people dead, were part of a three-year campaign [6] by al-Qaeda aimed at destabilizing Saudi Arabia. The identities of the 85 defendants have not been disclosed, though the Sabq news website has reported that five men sentenced to death a day earlier had been found guilty of assembling the car bombs [7] used to attack the compounds. They have 30 days to appeal their sentences, all of which were handed down for charges of taking part or abetting in the attacks.
Fropm Jurist [8], April 22. Used with permission.
Amnesty International's latest world report on the death penalty finds that a number of nations in the Middle East have fueled a spike in global figures [9] with a spree of executions. Along with Saudi Arabia and Iran, Iraq [10] has been in the lead.