Dubai: A Saudi prince was executed in Riyadh on Tuesday after a court found him guilty of shooting dead a fellow Saudi, official media reported, in a rare example of a ruling family member subjected to the death penalty.
Prince Turki bin Saud bin Turki bin Saud al-Kabir had pleaded guilty to shooting Adel al-Mohaimeed after a brawl, the ministry of interior said in a statement on state news agency SPA.
It did not say how the prince was killed. Most people executed in the kingdom are beheaded with a sword.
The prince was not in the Saudi line of succession. He belonged to the al-Kabir branch of the family, and was a great-grandson of Prince Saud, a paternal uncle of the modern kingdom's founder, King Abdulaziz, who is widely known as Ibn Saud. The current monarch, King Salman, is Ibn Saud's son.
Members of Saudi Arabia's ruling family are only rarely known to have been executed. One of the most prominent cases was Prince Faisal bin Musaid al-Saud, who assassinated his uncle, King Faisal, in 1975.
The family is estimated to number several thousand. While members receive monthly stipends, and the most senior princes command great wealth and political power, only a few in the family hold nationally important government posts.
"The government . . . is keen to keep order, stabilise security and bring about justice through implementing the rules prescribed by Allah," said the ministry statement.
Reuters