SAUDI ARABIA COMMUTES DEATH SENTENCE HANDED TO SIX IRANIANS

09 July 2012 :

Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister for Arab and African affairs says Saudi Arabia has commuted the death sentences handed to six Iranian nationals arrested in the kingdom to 15 years in prison.
“They have verbally informed us and a number of Iranian detainees, who are being held and sentenced to death on charges of drug possession, that the sentences of six of the inmates have been commuted to 15 years in prison,” Hossein Amir-Abdollahian told IRNA.
“They have also said that they will soon send an official note [on the revised sentences] to our Embassy [in Riyadh],” he added.
The Iranian top diplomat further said that an inmate has also been pardoned and would be released soon.
On the Saudi execution of 18 Iranian nationals on alleged charges of drug possession, Amir-Abdollahian condemned the move as ‘unacceptable.’
“The Islamic Republic of Iran reserves the right to pursue the issue [of the executions]. We do not consider the Saudi move as merely technical and Saudi Arabia must exactly explain [the reason behind] its action and suffer its consequences,” he added.
After reports about the execution of Iranian inmates in Saudi jails were confirmed, Iran's Foreign Ministry summoned the Saudi Arabian charge d’affaires on June 11.
The Foreign Ministry expressed the Islamic Republic’s strong objection to the executions, announcing that Tehran will pursue the case by means of relevant bodies.
The prisoners were Iranian sailors who were arrested on a fishing boat in international waters 70 miles off the coast of Saudi Arabia six years ago on false charges of drug possession.
 

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