Saudi Arabia has beheaded a young Sri Lankan housemaid after
rejecting appeals by her home country against her death
sentence for the killing of an infant left in her care in
2005, Saudi and Sri Lankan authorities said.
The Saudi Interior Ministry said in a statement run by the
official SPA news agency that Rizana Nafeek was executed in
the town of Dawadmy, near the capital Riyadh, on Wednesday
morning (local time).
Sri Lanka's Foreign Ministry said Nafeek was sentenced to
death in 2007 after her Saudi employer accused her of killing
his infant daughter while she was bottle-feeding. The Saudi
Interior Ministry statement said the infant was strangled
after a dispute between the maid and the baby's mother.
The Colombo government appealed against the death penalty but
the Saudi Supreme Court upheld it in 2010.
"President Mahinda Rajapaksa made a personal appeal on two
occasions immediately after the confirmation of the death
sentence, and a few days ago to stop the execution and grant
a pardon to Miss Rizana Nafeek," the Sri Lankan Foreign
Ministry said in a statement sent by email.
"President Rajapaksa and the government of Sri Lanka deplore
the execution of Miss Rizana Nafeek despite all efforts at
the highest level of the government and the outcry of the
people locally and internationally over the death sentence of
a juvenile housemaid," it said.
Amnesty International said the passport Nafeek used to enter
Saudi Arabia in May 2005 stated she was born in February
1982, but her birth certificate states she was born six year
later, which would have made her 17 at the time of the
infant's death.
Saudi households are highly dependent on housemaids from
African and South Asian countries. There have been reported
cases of domestic abuse in which families mistreat their
maids, who have then attacked the children of their
employers.
Human Rights Watch condemned the execution.
"Saudi Arabia is one of just three countries that executes
people for crimes they committed as children," said Nisha
Varia, senior women's rights researcher for Human Rights
Watch.
"In executing Rizana Nafeek, Saudi authorities demonstrated
callous disregard for basic humanity as well as Saudi
Arabia's international legal obligations."
Saudi Arabia, a U.S. ally, is an absolute monarchy that
follows the strict Wahhabi school of Islam and applies
sharia(Islamic law). Judges base decisions on their own
interpretation of sharia rather than on a written legal code
or on precedent.
Amnesty International, in a statement before the execution,
said that it appeared Nafeek had no access to lawyers either
during her pre-trial interrogation or at her trial in 2007.
"It appears that she was herself a child at the time and
there are real concerns about the fairness of her trial,"
Philip Luther, Amnesty International's Middle East and North
Africa Programme Director, said the day before the execution.
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