- Sputnik International
World
Get the latest news from around the world, live coverage, off-beat stories, features and analysis.

UK 'Neglecting Human Rights' as Saudis Omitted From Death Penalty Strategy

© AFP 2023 / Carl CourtSaudis Omitted from UK death penalty strategy
Saudis Omitted from UK death penalty strategy - Sputnik International
Subscribe
The UK has been accused of neglecting human rights concerns in favor of trade deals, after it was revealed the government omitted Saudi Arabia from a list of countries that can be challenged and criticized for its continued use of the death penalty.

The Gulf kingdom is the only major state that still uses the death to be omitted from the UK Foreign Office list, which was given to given to diplomats in 2011 as part of Britain's five-year plan aimed at restricting executions worldwide.

The list includes countries such as the US, China and Iran, while it also features smaller nations like Barbados, Singapore and Jordan that between them sentenced 10 people to death in 2014.

​The UK strategy lists a number of "priority countries" where diplomats are "encouraged" to "proactively drive forward" and "make progress" on the British goal of abolishing the death penalty.

Many critics have taken aim at Saudi Arabia's omission from the list, given that the country was accused of carrying out more than 150 executions in 2015, plus another 47 in a mass execution over the weekend.

Saudi Omission 'Shocking'

Campaigners have accused the UK government of deliberately leaving Saudi Arabia off the list to protect the country from British criticism, which could call into question a number of defense and trade deals between London and Riyadh.

Maya Foa, director of the death penalty team at human rights organization Reprieve said the findings were "shocking."

"Saudi Arabia has consistently ranked in the world's top five executioners, and a large proportion of beheadings carried out in the country have been for non-violent offences, including protest. It is shocking that the Kingdom was absent from the countries targeted by the UK's death penalty strategy over the past five years, when every other major executioner in the world — China, Iran, Iraq, the US and Pakistan — was included," Foa said.

​Allan Hogarth, head of policy at Amnesty International UK said the British government was trying its hardest not to criticize the Saudis over human rights concerns.

"We've become increasingly alarmed that the UK government has been bending over backwards to avoid criticizing Saudi Arabia's appalling human rights record," he said.

"Ministers are always harping on about how their 'engaged' relationship with Riyadh means they can talk 'frankly' on issues like human rights, but what do these conversations actually consist of and what have they ever achieved? Apparently very little. It's time the government reviewed its approach to human rights in the Kingdom and adopted a far more robust stance." 

Calls for Review of UK-Saudi Relationship

Liberal-Democrat leader Tim Farron has called for an investigation, saying that the government needed to "shine a light" on the "shady corners" of the bilateral relationship between the countries.

​"Saudi Arabia is a barbaric regime and the UK government must do more to stand up to them. The Government must not just write reports and accidentally miss them out due to worrying about diplomatic nicety, it should hold them to account.

"The Liberal Democrats have called for a debate into the UK — Saudi Arabia relations to try and shine a light into the shady corners of this relationship."

UK's involvement in Saudi UNHRC seat - Sputnik International
Calls for UK to Come Clean Over Saudi UN Human Rights Panel
Prime Minister David Cameron has said that while it doesn't agree with Saudi Arabia carrying out executions, he has defended the close ties between nations, citing the important counter-terrorism intelligence information London receives from Riyadh.

Former foreign secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind backed the PM, saying there were "a number of advantages" to the UK's relationship with the Saudis.

"There are a number of circumstances where Saudi Arabia and the West have co-operated effectively on counter-terrorism," he said.

"That has to be by far the single most important priority at this moment in time."

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала