Trigger warning: This post deals with execution and murder and may be distressing for some readers.
Today is a dark, dark day for human rights.
A suspected mentally ill woman who killed her allegedly abusive employer has been beheaded in Saudi Arabia.
Siti Zainab is the 60th person to be executed in the Arab state this year.
The Indonesian maid languished in custody for 15 years, not knowing her fate.
Authorities were waiting until the youngest child of the victim reached adulthood to see whether the family wanted the woman killed or pardoned, the Saudi Gazette reports.
In the Australian legal system, the woman – who claimed to have been abused by her victim – may have had a defence to the murder charge.
Or, if she was found to be both guilty of murder and mentally ill, her sentence would have been served in a forensic hospital, where she would have received treatment for her condition.
Either outcome is a far cry from the inhumane and undignified death that befell her on Tuesday, when she was beheaded without the knowledge of her family.
Related: “I’ve had a cup of tea with a man who executed 62 people.”
Amnesty International reports that, in November 1999, Ms Zainab “confessed” to stabbing her female employer 18 times during a police interrogation, at which she had no consular assistance and was believed to be mentally ill.
Before her arrest, she had sent two letters stating her employer and her employer’s son had treated her with cruelty.
She never had any legal representation.