This screen grab from the
documentary shows five bodies hanging from a pole suspended between two
cranes at a public execution site in Saudi Arabia.
Public beheadings at the
"frightening" rate of almost a day this year, muffling dissent,
widespread human rights abuses, and war crimes in Yemen have made Saudi
Arabia synonymous with one of the most repressive regimes in the world,
according to rights groups. But despite the kingdom’s relentless brutal
campaign and strict media control, activists have tried to expose the
extent of the regime’s barbarity and dismal human rights record through
various means, including social media and a recent documentary. “Saudi Arabia Uncovered”
is the result of six months of undercover shooting that lays bare the
country’s treatment of the people on its soil. The shocking documentary
features disturbing footage of public lashings and decapitations, and
depicts the lives of those who dared to protest against the Saudi
monarchy’s crackdown on peaceful protesters.
The documentary,
co-produced by Britain’s ITV network and the American Public
Broadcasting Service, is scheduled to be aired on Tuesday. File photo shows Saudi citizens holding an anti-regime protest in al-Awamiyah, Eastern Province.The
shocking exposé features footage of peaceful anti-regime protesters in
the Qatif region of oil-rich Eastern Province, where Ali Mohammed Baqir
al-Nimr was sentenced to death by beheading after being arrested at the
age of 17 for taking part in demonstrations. Amnesty International has
called for the release of Nimr, who could be sent to gallows imminently
according to Saudi media reports last week.
Ali is the nephew of
the late prominent Shia cleric, Ayatollah Sheikh Nimr Baqir al-Nimr, who
was executed along with 46 others in early January in the kingdom’s
largest execution in three decades. The killing of Sheikh Nimr caused
global outrage against Saudi Arabia’s crackdown on minorities,
especially the Shia Muslims that account for more than 20 percent of the
Saudi population. Ali Mohammed Baqir al-Nimr, the nephew of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr who was executed by the Saudi regime in January 2016.The
documentary also exposes how Saudi Arabia, the breeding ground of
Wahhabi ideology, tries to indoctrinate schoolchildren with the
extremist beliefs and hatred toward other religions and minorities.
“The
Christians should be punished with death until there are none left.
They should be beheaded,” a 14-year-old Saudi student says in response
to a cameraman in the video, adding, “We learn that Shias… should be
punished by death.”
Saudi Arabia has reportedly spent
$100 billion to nurture Wahhabism throughout the world, which is
directly responsible for the rise of such terror networks as the Daesh
Takfiri group, which is wreaking havoc in several countries, mainly Iraq
and Syria. Takfirism, or the practice of accusing others of being
"infidels," is a characteristic of Wahhabism, the radical ideology
dominating Saudi Arabia and freely espoused by the country’s clerics.
Saudi Arabia also provides widely-reported support for Daesh.
The
documentary also shows scenes of public beheadings, lashings, and
amputations of body parts at a Riyadh public place nicknamed Chop Chop
Square, where police can be seen whipping women and executioners
brandishing their swords. In a very heart-wrenching scene, one of the
women, who are treated as second-class citizens in the Arab country, can
be heard screaming, “I did not do it,” before being decapitated by a
swordsman.
In another gruesome execution, the bodies
of five people accused of robbery can be seen hanging from a pole
hoisted between two cranes in public display for days.
Amnesty International UK’s Head of Policy and Government Affairs Allan Hogarth told The Independent earlier this month that “withdeath
sentences imposed after deeply unfair - and sometimes secret -
proceedings, with defendants often denied a lawyer, and with courts
regularly convicting people on the basis of ‘confessions’ extracted
under torture, Saudi Arabia is making a mockery of justice and dozens of
people are paying with their lives.”
Under
the Saudi law, apostasy, armed robbery, drug trafficking, rape, and
murder carry the death penalty. Beheading with a sword is the most
common form of execution in Saudi Arabia. This screen grab from the exposé shows a Saudi woman being shoved out of the way by a man in a supermarket.According to Britain’s Daily Mail,
Saudi authorities have threatened to kill Loujain al-Hathloul, a Saudi
activist who has taken part in the film. The women’s rights campaigner
had previously been imprisoned after posting a video of her while
driving, which is banned in the country. Women in Saudi Arabia face many
restrictions and must get permission from male family members to
travel, work, marry or even open a bank account.
Saudi Arabia is
the only country in the world where women are not allowed to drive, a
ban that stems from a religious fatwa imposed by the country’s Wahhabi
clerics. If women get behind the wheel in the kingdom, they may be
arrested, sent to court and even flogged.
Manal al-Sharif, one of the first Saudi activists who face imprisonment for defying the driving ban, said in a Ted Talk that Wahhabi clerics are quick to makeslanderous
remarks against women drivers. His brother was also forced to quit his
job as a geologist and leave the kingdom just for lending his car to
Manal.