I love how we look the other way on the abhorrent human rights records of our allies.
I wish I could post the picture of the Saudi prince holding hands with W.
Ali Mohammed al-Nimr was just 17 when he was arrested in 2012 and accused of taking part in anti-government protests and illegally possessing firearms; he was sentenced to death by crucifixion in 2014. Now, Saudi Arabia has dismissed his final appeal and he has no other legal options to fight the sentence, Middle East Monitor reports. As the International Business Times reports, it appears al-Nimr's connection to Sheikh Nimr al-Nimrhis uncle and a prominent religious leader and critic of the Saudi regimeis a large part of the case against him. With the elder al-Nimr scheduled to be executed this weekthere's been no confirmation of it happening so faractivists fear his nephew could also be executed within days.
Activists say the younger al-Nimr was tortured, denied access to lawyers, and forced to sign a confession under duress; they claim there is no evidence of firearms offenses al-Nimr was charged with, and al-Nimr and his family deny all the charges against him. His trial did not meet international standards, reports IBT, and his appeal was held in secret without al-Nimr knowing about it. "No one should have to go through the ordeal Ali has sufferedtorture, forced confession, and an unfair, secret trial process," says an advocate at legal charity Reprieve. "His executionbased apparently on the authorities dislike for his uncle, and his involvement in anti-government protestswould violate international law and the most basic standards of decency." (Death sentences have increased so much this year that Saudi authorities posted a job opening for executioners.)
http://www.newser.com/story/213009/man-arrested-at-17-in-saudi-arabia-to-be-crucified.html?utm_source=FBTraffic&utm_medium=fijifrost&utm_campaign=CMfacebook&ts_pid=2