Saudi Arabia has executed a member of its royal family for the first time in decades after he was convicted of shooting another during a brawl.
Prince Turki bin Saud al-Kabeer was put to death in the capital, Riyadh, the Saudi state news service said.
While the report did not detail the method used, most death penalties in Saudi Arabia are carried out by beheading in a public square.
The rare event rocketed around the kingdom’s social media networks, with some Saudis saying they never imagined such a thing would happen. Others argued the execution showed the quality of their justice system, which follows a strict interpretation of Shariah law and is often criticised by human rights groups and Western governments for what they consider harsh punishments.
“The greatest thing is that the citizen sees the law applied to everyone, and that there are not big people and other small people,” Abdul-Rahman al-Lahim, a prominent Saudi lawyer, wrote on Twitter.
Other Saudis lauded the monarch, King Salman, on Twitter under an Arabic hashtag that translated as, "Decisive Salman orders retribution for the prince."
Royal perks
Saudi Arabia is one of the world’s few remaining absolute monarchies. The thousands of members of the royal family enjoy perks not available to the rest of the country’s 20 million citizens.
Tuesday’s execution was the first time that a member of the royal family had been put to death for murder by the state since 1975, when Prince Faisal bin Musaid was beheaded in Riyadh for assassinating King Faisal.
A couple of years later, a princess and her husband were executed for alleged adultery after the princess refused to marry a man selected by the family. The princess, Mishael, was shot as her husband, Khalid Muhallal, watched. He was then beheaded, according to a New York Times obituary of her grandfather, Prince Mohammed Ibn Abdel-Aziz.
It was unclear how many people watched the execution of Turki on Tuesday or what their immediate reaction was. The state news media report did not release his age or provide any other biographical information.
Another member of the royal family, Prince Faisal bin Farhan al-Saud, said by telephone from Riyadh that Turki was from one of the most prominent branches of the royal family after that of the direct descendants of King Abdulaziz, who founded the modern Saudi state in 1932.
Saudi Arabia has executed 143 people so far this year, according to a count by Human Rights Watch.
New York Times