
| New king Salman of Saudi Arabia |
His alleged victims were children assaulted in 2011 in a string of attacks in Jiddah.
The
case has caused a stir on social media — which is unusual in Saudi
Arabia for cases of violent crimes — in part because al-Zahrani claimed
his innocence throughout the trial and two later appeals.
Last
year, al-Zahrani appealed in a 20-minute video for Saudi King Abdullah,
who died on Friday, to intervene. In the widely-viewed video, the
45-year-old Arabic teacher claimed he was framed by police and that a
man — a neighbor of 10 years — who accused him of molesting his daughter
was also a police investigator in the case.
An Arabic hashtag on
Twitter, "We are all Moussa al-Zahrani" garnered thousands of comments
by Saudis with conflicting opinions over the case.
Al-Zahrani's
relatives appeared on Saudi talk shows, saying the case was riddled
with inconsistencies and that the judiciary did not weigh all the
evidence. They claimed a medical report found the investigator's 10
year-old daughter had not been assaulted and that several cases of
assault against young girls took place in Jiddah while al-Zahrani was
already jailed.
His brother, Hassan al-Zahrani said after the execution that his brother, a father of six, could not
have committed the crimes he was convicted of.
Saudi
Arabia, which has one of the highest execution rates in the world,
follows a strict interpretation of Islamic law and applies the death
penalty for crimes such as murder, rape and witchcraft.
