Iran, Egypt and Saudi Arabia account for 80% of all recorded state-sanctioned executions in 2021, reveals Amnesty report
Amnesty International released a 66-page report on Tuesday documenting a rise in state-sanctioned executions in 2021 compared to 2020. The report found that some of the world's top executioners were in the Middle East and North Africa.
Amnesty recorded 579 state-sanctioned deaths in 2021, a 20% increase from the previous year [source: Getty]
Iran, Egypt and Saudi Arabia accounted for 80 percent of all known state-sanctioned worldwide in 2021, according to a bombshell report by
The , home to the worldâs top executioners, saw a 19 percent rise in state killings in 2021 compared to 2020, according to the human rights groupâs 66-page document, âDeath Sentencing and Executions 2021â.
Iran accounted for 60 percent of state killings in the region, with 314 documented deaths.
are known to have executed 83 people, and Saudi Arabia 65.
Globally, documented state-sanctioned execution rose in 2021 from 2020, largely due to Iran, from 483 to 579. However, levels worldwide were still at their second-lowest since 2010, indicating that the death penalty continues to be used by an âisolated minorityâ said Amnesty.
âGlobally itâs a positive trend, the world is moving, albeit slowly, towards the full abolition of the death penalty. The Middle East somewhat bucks this trend and China, Vietnam and North Korea are worrying, but it is only a matter of time before the death penalty is abolished,â Oluwatosin Popoola, a legal adviser to Amnesty International and one of the reportâs authors, told °źÂț”ș.
Amnesty acknowledged that figures were likely to be much higher in reality given deliberate obfuscation by authorities over state executions.
No specific data was provided on China, for example, where authorities have orchestrated a systematic campaign, labelled as a âgenocideâ by a UK-based tribunal, to . The rights group estimated that state executions have taken place in the thousands in China. However, it has not released figures on the Peopleâs Republic since 2009 due to âmisrepresentationâ of Amnesty data.
Data on North Korea and Vietnam are also omitted due to state secrecy and the difficulties of independently verifying reports.
The lawyer added that when worldwide campaigns calling for the abolition of the death penalty first started in 1977 only 16 countries had outlawed capital punishment. Today it's 108 countries.
Nevertheless, despite these gains, Amnesty's report offers a sober warning: â[it is] not yet time to let off pressureâ.
âIt is a cruel and inhumane punishment,â said Popoola. âTaking a life is not the solution.â
Iran
Around 314 people were executed in Iran in 2021, a 28 percent increase from the previous year, according to Amnestyâs report.
Noticeably, there was a spike in executions in September, at least 48, the month after came to power.
âWe canât say whether there is a link between Raisi and the increasing deaths,â said Popoola. âIran has been a top executioner for years, itâs routine. [It is likely] the executions would have been carried out anyway.â
Over 50 percent of state executions in the Islamic Republic were linked to murder charges.
132 people, however, were killed due to , a five-fold increase from the previous year.
Iranian law allows the death penalty to be used as punishment in circumstances that do not âmeet the threshold under international law,â explained Popoola. For example, he added, they donât examine whether a killing was intentional.
When asked about the rise in drug-related executions, he said: â[Drug crime] is not unique to Iran. However, there will be a high number of deaths if you consider it a capital offence.â
Official sources reported none of the drug-related executions, according to Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHR). The rights group has continued to document several killings linked to narcotic crimes, in, indicating that this trend shows no sign of slowing down.
In their report, Amnesty accused Iranian authorities of conducting grossly unfair trials, in which suspects were often denied access to a lawyer and verdicts were based on âconfessionsâ obtained under torture. Families of the convicted, they said, were unable to say their last goodbyes as executions take place in secret.
One individual named in the report was Sajad Sanjari, who was one of three people in Iran executed in 2021 for crimes committed as a minor. He was 15 at the time of his alleged offence. He was hanged in secret. His charge: murdering a man who was trying to him.
Saudi Arabia
The number of state-sanctioned executions more than doubled in Saudi Arabia from 27 in 2020 to 65 in 2021, according to Amnesty.
The majority were for murder charges, while over a dozen were connected to terrorism-related offences.
18 of those killed were foreigners.
Amnesty accused the kingdom of conducting trials that âdid not meet international standards,â and, like Iran, of obtaining âconfessionsâ under torture.
âSaudi Arabia still has a long way to goâ when it comes to the death penalty, said Popoola.
The lawyer added that the kingdomâs move to stop the execution of children was ârecommendable,â but added: means there is still far to go.
Amnestyâs report drew particular attention to the executions of dissents in Saudi Arabia. This includes the killing of Mustafa al-Darwish, a young Saudi man from the Shia minority who was convicted of charges related to his alleged participation in violent
Egypt
Egypt, unlike Iran or Saudi Arabia, recorded a dramatic decrease in the number of state-sanctioned killings, dropping by 22 percent in 2021 compared to 2020, reported the rights group.
However, Amnesty maintained that the North African country was âone of the worldâs main executionersâ.
âThe fall should not be taken as a sign of progress,â said the lawyer. âEgypt is still a prolific executioner.â
Namely, the number of death sentences handed out by Egyptian authorities skyrocketed, with at least 356 people sentenced to death in 2021, a 34 percent rise on the previous year.
continued to be commonplace, which are âunfair by their very nature,â said Amnesty as individuals arenât given a fair ruling or adequate time to appeal allegations.
On 26 April, during the holy month of Ramadan, the Egyptian authorities executed nine people, including an 82-year-old man. Their court case was condemned as defendants were denied access to their lawyers and coerced to âconfess,â said Amnesty.