Saudi
Arabia advertised vacancies for eight executioners Tuesday after beheading
nearly as many people since the start of the year as it did in the whole of
2014.
The civil
service ministry said that no qualifications were necessary and that applicants
would be exempted from the usual entrance exams.
It said
that as well as beheadings, the successful candidates would be expected to
carry out amputations ordered by the courts under the kingdom’s strict version
of Islamic sharia law.
Amputation
of one or both hands is a routine penalty for theft. Drug trafficking, rape,
murder, apostasy and armed robbery are all punishable by death.
Most
executions are carried out by beheading, but a few are carried out by firing
squad, stoning or crucifixion.
All are
carried out in public and video footage sometimes appears on the Internet
despite a ban on filming.
In
January, gruesome footage was posted of a Burmese woman protesting her
innocence before being beheaded by a swordsman on a public street in the Muslim
holy city of Mecca.
Ignoring
her screams, the white-robed executioner forces her to lie down on the ground,
near a pedestrian crossing, then severs her head with a curved sword.
The
official Saudi Press Agency said that Layla bint Abdul Mutaleb Bassim had been
sentenced to death for killing her husband’s six-year-old daughter.
The
vacancies were advertised on the ministry’s website in the “religious jobs”
section.
Last
year, Saudi Arabia executed 87 people, according to an AFP tally, ranking it
third in the world for use of the death penalty.
Already
this year, it has put 84 people to death in what human rights group Amnesty
International has described as a “macrabre spike.”
The
interior ministry says the death penalty is an important deterrent.
But on a
visit to Riyadh this month, French President Francois Hollande said capital
punishment “should be banned”.
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