
Hassan Nasrallah (Reuters)
Lebanon's Shia Hezbollah condemned the execution of a prominent Shia cleric in Saudi Arabia on Saturday, calling it an "assassination" and blaming it on the United States and its allies' support for Riyadh.
Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr and three other members of Saudi Arabia's Shia minority were executed on Saturday alongside 43 Sunni Islamist militant, drawing condemnation by Shia across the Middle East.
The "real reason" for the execution was "that Sheikh Nimr... demanded the squandered rights of an oppressed people," Hezbollah said in a statement, apparently referring to Saudi Arabia' Shia minority.
"The Saudi authorities ... put them (the Shia executed) together with terrorist bands and groups which had committed crimes against civilians. Sheikh Nimr resisted oppression with words," the Hezbollah statement said.
It said it held the United States and its allies directly responsible through their support for the Saudi government, and urged the international community and rights groups to condemn the execution.
Lebanon's Supreme Islamic Shia Council earlier said Nimr's execution was a "grave mistake... and an execution of reason, moderation and dialogue."
Nimr, who had called for pro-democracy demonstrations, was arrested in 2012, spurring protests in which three died. He had long been regarded as the most vocal Shia leader in the eastern district of Qatif, willing to publicly criticise the Al Saud ruling family and call directly for elections. But he was careful to avoid calling for violence, analysts say.
Saturday's executions took place in 12 cities in Saudi Arabia, four prisons using firing squads and the others beheading.
The simultaneous execution of 47 people - 45 Saudis, one Egyptian and a man from Chad - was the biggest mass execution for security offences in Saudi Arabia since the 1980 killing of 63 Islamist militant rebels who seized Mecca's Grand Mosque in 1979.
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