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Saudi Arabia’s leading executioner: ‘I Lead a Normal Life’

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  • Saudi Arabia’s leading executioner: ‘I Lead a Normal Life’


    Kingdom’s Leading Executioner Says: ‘I Lead a Normal Life’
    Mahmoud Ahmad, Arab News Staff



    JEDDAH, 5 June 2003 — Saudi Arabia’s leading executioner Muhammad Saad Al-Beshi will behead up to seven people in a day.

    “It doesn’t matter to me: Two, four, 10 — As long as I’m doing God’s will, it doesn’t matter how many people I execute,” he told Okaz newspaper in an interview.

    He started at a prison in Taif, where his job was to handcuff and blindfold the prisoners before their execution. “Because of this background, I developed a desire to be an executioner,” he says.

    He applied for the job and was accepted.

    His first job came in 1998 in Jeddah. “The criminal was tied and blindfolded. With one stroke of the sword I severed his head. It rolled meters away.” Of course he was nervous, then, he says, as many people were watching, but now stage fright is a thing of the past.

    He says he is calm at work because he is doing God’s work. “But there are many people who faint when they witness an execution. I don’t know why they come and watch if they don’t have the stomach for it.

    “Me? I sleep very well,” he adds.

    Does he think people are afraid of him? “In this country we have a society that understands God’s law,” he says. “No one is afraid of me. I have a lot of relatives, and many friends at the mosque, and I live a normal life like everyone else. There are no drawbacks for my social life.”

    Before an execution, nonetheless, he will go to the victim’s family to obtain forgiveness for the criminal. “I always have that hope, until the very last minute, and I pray to God to give the criminal a new lease of life. I always keep that hope alive.”

    Al-Beshi will not reveal how much he gets paid per execution as this is a confidential agreement with the government. But he insists that the reward is not important. “I am very proud to do God’s work,” he reiterates.

    However, he does reveal that a sword will cost something in the region of SR20,000. “It’s a gift from the government. I look after it and sharpen it once in a while, and I make sure to clean it of bloodstains.

    “It’s very sharp. People are amazed how fast it can separate the head from the body.”

    By the time the victims reach the execution square they have surrendered themselves to death, he says, though they may hope to be forgiven at the last minute. “Their hearts and minds are taken up with reciting the Shahada.” The only conversation with the prisoner is when he tells him to say the Shahada.

    “When they get to the execution square, their strength drains away. Then I read the execution order, and at a signal I cut the prisoner’s head off.”

    He has executed numerous women without hesitation, he explains. “Despite the fact that I hate violence against women, when it comes to God’s will, I have to carry it out.”

    There is no great difference between executing men and women, except that the women wear hijab, and nobody is allowed near them except Al-Beshi himself when the time for execution comes.

    When executing women he will use either gun or sword. “It depends what they ask me to use. Sometimes they ask me to use a sword and sometimes a gun. But most of the time I use the sword,” he adds.

    As an experienced executioner, 42-year-old Al-Beshi is entrusted with the task of training the young. “I successfully trained my son Musaed, 22, as an executioner and he was approved and chosen,” he says proudly. Training focuses on the way to hold the sword and where to hit, and is mostly through observing the executioner at work.

    An executioner’s life, of course, is not all killing. Sometimes it can be amputation of hands and legs. “I use a special sharp knife, not a sword,” he explains. “When I cut off a hand I cut it from the joint. If it is a leg the authorities specify where it is to be taken off, so I follow that.”

    Al-Beshi describes himself as a family man. Married before he became an executioner, his wife did not object to his chosen profession. “She only asked me to think carefully before committing myself,” he recalls. “But I don’t think she’s afraid of me,” he smiles. “I deal with my family with kindness and love. They aren’t afraid when I come back from an execution. Sometimes they help me clean my sword.”

    A father of seven, he is a proud grandfather already. “I have a married daughter who has a son. He is called Haza, and he’s my pride and joy. And then there are my sons. The oldest one is Saad, and of course there is Musaed, who’ll be the next executioner,” he adds.


  • #2
    "It" is one wierd guy!

    The reason I say "it" is because "it" does not seem human at all.
    "The Director also sets the record straight on what would happen if oxygen masks were to drop from the ceiling: The passengers freak out with abandon, instead of continuing to chat amiably, as though lunch were being served, like they do on those in-flight safety videos."

    -- The LA Times, in a review of 'Flightplan'

    Comment


    • #3
      I guess 'executioner' doesn't come to mind when one thinks of career choices, but basically it is just a job level within the penal system in Saudi Arabia, just like here in the States you have people whose job involves capital punishment. To us is seems inhumane to behead someone, it seems barbaric and cruel; but remember, in the West, such punishment used to be commonplace, we just didn't know the Executioner (they wore a mask and today several people press buttons so no one really knows who preformed the leathal blow).

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      • #4
        Originally posted by srbmod
        I guess 'executioner' doesn't come to mind when one thinks of career choices,
        Better than execitionee.
        Try to catch me flyin dirty...

        Comment


        • #5
          This is the 1k mark.
          1000 posts!!!

          Many Friends, Family man. Must be great to be the friend, child, grandchild, spouse, or relative of a man who if you were to commit a sin, would probably be the one to punish you.

          So Mr Executioner goes over to the family of the executionee before the execution asking for forgiveness...I find it a little hard to grasp the fact that the family would be pleased to see him.

          :Knock Knock:

          Door Opens

          "Hello my name is Muhammad Saad Al-Beshi, I will be decapitating your son tomorow."

          "Welcome Mr. Al-Beshi, would you like soemthing to drink".

          Here's what I'd say:

          "Get lost!"

          I must say, I don't think I'll ever understand or accept the Saudi legal system and I am a Muslim myself. I think that cutting one's hand off for steeling or executing adulterers is just madness.

          Comment


          • #6
            Knock Knock:

            Door Opens

            "Hello my name is Muhammad Saad Al-Beshi, I will be decapitating your son tomorow."

            "Welcome Mr. Al-Beshi, would you like soemthing to drink".
            "The Director also sets the record straight on what would happen if oxygen masks were to drop from the ceiling: The passengers freak out with abandon, instead of continuing to chat amiably, as though lunch were being served, like they do on those in-flight safety videos."

            -- The LA Times, in a review of 'Flightplan'

            Comment


            • #7
              Yup, nothing more normal that beheading people...


              A Colombian guy moved by the winds of fate to St. Louis, MO

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