[Deathpenalty] death penalty news----worldwide

Rick Halperin rhalperi at smu.edu
Fri Mar 20 16:38:53 CDT 2015





March 20



BELARUS:

EU Criticizes Belarus Over Death Sentence



The European Union has sharply criticized Belarus, the only European country 
that applies capital punishment, for sentencing a man to death.

In its statement issued on March 19, the EU said that a court in the 
southeastern city of Homel sentenced Syarhey Ivanou to death the previous day.

Ivanou was convicted of murder and rape.

The EU expressed its "deepest sympathy of the victim of these crimes."

"Nevertheless, the European Union opposes capital punishment in all cases as it 
cannot be justified under any circumstances. The death penalty is a cruel and 
inhuman punishment, which fails to act as a deterrent and represents an 
unacceptable denial of human dignity and integrity," it said.

The EU said that Ivanou's "right to appeal must be fully guaranteed."

The last reported execution of a convict in Belarus took place in April 2014.

Rights activists said the man, who was convicted of murdering his wife and her 
lover, was executed before the UN Committee on Human Rights examined his 
appeal.

(source: Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty)








GLOBAL:

Pope Francis calls death penalty 'unacceptable,' urges abolition



Pope Francis came out squarely against the death penalty once again, calling it 
"unacceptable" regardless of the seriousness of the crime of the condemned.

Pope Francis met with a 3-person delegation of the International Commission 
Against the Death Penalty March 20, and issued a letter on the occasion urging 
worldwide abolition.

Citing his previous messages against the death penalty, the pope called capital 
punishment "cruel, inhumane and degrading" and said it "does not bring justice 
to the victims, but only foments revenge."

Furthermore, in a modern "state of law, the death penalty represents a failure" 
because it obliges the state to kill in the name of justice, the pope said. 
Rather, it is a method frequently used by "totalitarian regimes and fanatical 
groups" to do away with "political dissidents, minorities" and any other person 
deemed a threat to their power and to their goals.

"Human justice is imperfect," he said, and the death penalty loses all 
legitimacy within penal systems where judicial error is possible.

Increasingly, public opinion is against the death penalty, in view of the 
effective means available today to restrain a criminal without denying them the 
possibility to redeem themselves and of a "greater moral sensitivity regarding 
the value of human life," Pope Francis said.

The death penalty is an affront to the sanctity of life and to the dignity of 
the human person, he said. It contradicts God's plan for humankind and society 
and God's merciful justice, he added.

Capital punishment "is cruel, inhuman and degrading, as is the anxiety that 
precedes the moment of execution and the terrible wait between the sentence and 
the application of the punishment, a 'torture' which, in the name of a just 
process, usually lasts many years and, in awaiting death, leads to sickness and 
insanity."

The pope went on to say that the application of capital punishment denies the 
condemned the possibility of making reparation for the wrong committed, of 
expressing their interior conversion through confession, and expressing 
contrition, so as to encounter God's merciful and saving love.

Speaking about life imprisonment, Pope Francis said such sentences makes it 
impossible for a prisoner to "project a future" and in that way can be 
considered a "disguised death" as it deprives prisoners not only of their 
freedom but also of their hope.

(source: Catholic News Service)








MALAYSIA:

Malaysian State Proposes Bill Issuing Death Penalty for 'Apostasy'



The State Assembly of Kelantan, Malaysia, is considering a hudud (crimes 
against God) bill that will allow the state to execute anyone accused of 
apostasy, which is the abandonment of Islam.

Free Malaysia Today reports:

The Syariah Criminal Code II 1993 classifies "intidah" and "riddah" as 
voluntary or deliberate pronouncements or utterances of words that violate a 
Muslim's creed, known has aqidah.

These involve challenges to fundamental aspects of the Islamic faith of every 
Muslim, including Rukun Islam (Pillars of Islam), Rukun Iman (Pillars of Faith) 
and the distinction between halal and haram.

If a person is convicted of apostasy, he or she will receive a prison sentence. 
If the person does not repent, they could be executed.

"Provided that when he repents whether the repentance is done before the death 
sentence is pronounced or after such pronouncement is carried out, he shall be 
free of the hudud sentence and his forfeited property shall be returned to 
him," says the bill.

A lawyer, who was not named, told the publication these new provisions are 
"against basic legal principles and also opens up the grave possibility of 
arbitrary exercises of the power by state authorities."

"Firstly, what constitutes a violation of Rukun Islam and Rukun Iman appears 
not to be properly defined, leaving them open to interpretation," he claimed. 
"Secondly, the fact that the purpose of the punishment - even to the point of 
execution - is to secure repentance throws open the possibility of a citizen 
being coerced involuntarily into remaining in the faith. It is a trite 
principle of law that admissions and confessions must be voluntarily given - 
they cannot be extracted by inducement, threat or promise. Thirdly, and most 
importantly, it is a clear violation of the fundamental constitutional right of 
freedom of religion."

On Friday, the state's Menteri Besar Datuk Ahmad Yakob announced a revision. 
The current version, as written, said the penalty is imprisonment while in the 
English version, the penalty is imprisonment with possibility of execution. 
Yakob said in the English version "the death penalty word will be replaced with 
huded."

"There's no difference," said Kelantan Deputy Menteri Besar Datuk Mohd Amar Nik 
Abdullah. "It reality it is the same. Punishment for apostasy is death penalty. 
Hudud punishment for apostasy is death. It is just that the word used was 
different. So, we have adjusted ... using 'hudud' in English as well. Just so 
that no one is confused."

(source: The Malaysian Insider)








RUSSIA:

Pardon impossible to execute. Where's the comma?----Death penalty in Russia



The question of death penalty appears to be one of the most debatable questions 
in the human society. For hundreds of years, disputes on the subjects have been 
driving a wedge between common people, lawyers, writers, thinkers and so on and 
so forth. Yet, criminals continue committing crimes, whether death penalty 
exists or not.

When the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation ruled unconstitutional 
the possibility of bringing down death sentences in the absence of jury trials 
in Russia nationwide, the ban seemed to be merely a technical and a temporal 
one. However, years have passed, but nothing has changed. Opponents of death 
penalty have been more and more persistent.

"In 1996, Russian President Boris Yeltsin signed a decree to phase out death 
penalty, - Professor of the School of Economics, Honored Lawyer of Russia, 
member of the Presidential Council for Civil Society Institutions and Human 
Rights, Sergei Pashn, said in an interview with Pravda.Ru. - The Constitutional 
Court only continued this trend. Russia has not executed convicts since August 
1996. Why am I against death penalty? In Europe, death penalty is used 
practically nowhere. There are countries, where death penalty is preserved in 
the law, but no judge allows to resort to this. If Russia wants to be part of 
Europe, Russia should abandon death penalty. Especially because violent crimes 
such as murder or grievous bodily harm, have been increasingly shrinking year 
by year."

Russia has not abolished death penalty completely

Here is what well-known Soviet and Russian scientist and criminologist, writer 
and screenwriter, Doctor of Law, Professor, Honored Lawyer of the Russian 
Federation, retired police colonel and honorary police officer Daniel Koretsky 
had to say on the subject of the moratorium on death penalty:

"This is not a moratorium, by the way. The moratorium was in effect when the 
president signed a decree on the temporary suspension of execution and 
sentencing to death. It was in 1996. I have written many times that abolishing 
death penalty was de facto illegitimate, because we have this kind of 
punishment in the Constitution and the Penal Code today. In order to cancel 
this form of punishment, it is up to the State Duma to make an adequate 
decision, because it is the State Duma that can change the Penal Code. The 
Russian Constitution says that death penalty is valid unless it is completely 
abolished.

"To date, we have not provided an effective legal institution of death penalty 
in connection with the decision of the Constitutional Court. This is a paradox. 
Because the Constitutional Court may interpret the Constitution, but it can not 
change the Constitution. That is the case from the legal side of it."

The position of the Russian Orthodox Church is well-known. The President has 
repeatedly stated that toughening punishment does not eradicate crime. Yet, no 
one says that death penalty should be used here and there. State violence can 
be used very carefully, as one should analyze every little aspect before making 
a decision to kill or not to kill a scoundrel.

When Pravda.Ru asked this question to Sergei Pashin, he replied:

"Actually, you quoted Cesare Beccaria. This eminent jurist and humanist of 
Renaissance said so in the XVIII century, and I am pleased that our president 
shares this point of view. A debate is of course possible, but the Russian 
Constitutional Court wrote in its ruling back in 2010 that the trend to abolish 
death penalty was irreversible.

"In fact, the Constitutional Court's decision prevents the imposition of death 
sentences and the carrying out of executions. So it is possible to discuss, 
including selectively. But in general, from the point of view of our legal 
system, this discussion is useless. The intensity of death penalty does not 
affect the level of crime. There are countries where the abolition of death 
penalty led to a decrease in the number of murders. This happened in Canada in 
1974."

Death penalty does not eradicate crime

There are other examples. In late December 2014, Pakistan lifted the ban on the 
execution of criminals convicted of terrorism. Can Russia do the same? Is it 
possible to execute for terrorism or - sex crimes - only incorrigible criminals 
that is?

"It questions the reliability of the judicial system, - Honored Lawyer of 
Russia Sergei Pashin said in an interview with Pravda.Ru. - Firstly, our 
judicial system is not to be relied upon much. Secondly, we can not execute 
terrorists, because jury trial has not been provided for terrorists since 2008, 
and the 20th article of the Constitution implies that it is impossible to bring 
down a death sentence without a jury trial. In addition, the legal position of 
the Constitutional Court, for reasons of equity, prevents from imposing death 
penalty, even if at least one region of the country has no jury."

Pravda.Ru asked Sergei Pashin to comment the remarks by well-known German poet 
and writer Goethe, a talented scientist and thinker, who also received the 
title of privy councilor and hereditary nobility for his public service in the 
duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach in 1782.

Here is what Goethe said: "If one could abolish death, we would not have 
anything against it, but abolishing death penalty would be hard. If it 
happened, we would have to reinstate it every once in a while."

"That was said a long time ago, - Sergei Pashin said. - The current situation 
has changed. And then you know, Goethe was a minister, but Goethe was also a 
writer and poet. The story of Margarita from the tragedy "Faust," whom the 
author executed for the murder of a child, was tormenting him. When he was 
signing a similar death sentence in real life, it was incredibly hard for him. 
That is an outdated quote. In Germany, there is no death penalty, but Germany 
does not want to retrieve it."

It just so happens that the thoughts of Cesare Bonesana-Beccaria, who died in 
1794, still live today, while the aphorisms by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe that 
he published in 1829 are no longer relevant. Why so?

Pardon impossible to execute. Are we going to finally decide where to put a 
comma there?

(source: Igor Bukker, Pravda)



PAKISTAN----executions

3 death convicts hanged in Adiala jail



The authorities on Thursday hanged 3 murder convicts, including 2 brothers, at 
Adiala Jail in Rawalpindi.

Brothers Ghulam Muhammad and Asghar Ali of Jalti were sent to the gallows at 
5.30am in the morning, followed by the third convict Gulistan Khan, who hailed 
from Kallar Syedan. Earlier, the jail authorities had arranged last meetings 
with the family members and relatives after receiving the death warrants for 
the three convicts.

Tight security arrangements were made in and around the jail at the time of 
hangings to avoid any untoward incident. The bodies later were handed over to 
the heirs who took them to their native towns for burial. Ghulam Muhammad and 
Asghar Ali were awarded capital punishment for killing 2 relatives in 1996 in 
Jalti whereas Gulistan Khan was convicted for a murder of a man belonging to 
his town in 1998.

Many convicts on death row have been hanged over the past few weeks after Prime 
Minister Nawaz Sharif lifted the moratorium on the death penalty late last 
year. 9 murder convicts were hanged across the country on March 18 while 
another 12 were sent to the gallows on March 17.

Holding ground: Islamabad defends capital punishment amid outcry



Pakistan continues to defend its decision to lift the moratorium on death 
penalty even after the United Nations and the European Union (EU) have voiced 
their concerns over frequent executions of convicts in the country since 
December last year.

"Pakistan is not violating any international law," said Tasnim Aslam, 
spokesperson for the Foreign Office (FO), at her weekly briefing on Thursday.

"Our constitution and legal system allow death penalty within legal parameters 
and the condition of a fair trial."

Her statement came after the UN and the EU sought immediate ban on the death 
penalty. The UN reminded Pakistan of its international obligations to ban 
capital punishment.

Its statement said that under international treaties, in particular the 
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) as well as the 
Convention on the Rights of the Child, Pakistan had legally committed itself to 
ensuring due process and not imposing the death penalty. "Moving away from the 
death penalty will contribute to human development, dignity and rights."

Admitting that Pakistan was a signatory to the ICCPR, the FO spokesperson said 
one of its provisions allowed countries that have not abolished capital 
punishment to impose the death penalty in most serious crimes.

The UN also expressed concerns over reports that some of the executed convicts 
were minors when the offence was committed. "The right to life is a fundamental 
human right," said a statement issued by the organisation. "UN 
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has stated that the death penalty has no place in 
the 21st century. According to some estimates, there are more than 8,000 
prisoners on death row."

The UN said it was concerned about cases where the death penalty was handed to 
minors but welcomed reviews of these cases, such as the recent case of Shafqat 
Hussain.

The statement said the UN had consistently called for an unequivocal end to the 
execution of anyone, anywhere, who was convicted of committing a crime when 
they were under the age of 18. "There is no scientific proof that the death 
penalty serves as a deterrent or contributes to combating crime or violent 
extremism."

GSP Plus status

Responding to a question, the FO spokesperson said the government's decision to 
lift the moratorium on death penalty would not affect the GSP Plus status 
granted to the country by the EU for greater market access to its products.

"The EU may not agree, but it understands our perspective. Our engagement will 
continue. We do not expect this issue would impact the GSP Plus status for 
Pakistan."

The EU termed the death penalty an "inhumane and cruel act", insisting that 
capital punishment did not act as a deterrent against crimes.

(source for both: Express Tribune)

********************************

Pakistan man on death row links MQM to killings



The Mutthida Qaumi Movement (MQM) has landed in further trouble after death-row 
convict Saulat Mirza's statement that he killed people on the orders of the 
party chief Altaf Hussain - a statement that led the government to defer his 
hanging. The law enforcement agencies were on Thursday given permission to meet 
Mirza in person. "There is no time limit for the interrogation and it can be as 
long as the law enforcers want it to be", an official said.

Mirza was scheduled to be hanged on Thursday. But the federal government 
deferred his execution by at least 72 hours on basis of his accusations against 
Mr Hussain and other people affiliated with the MQM.

The statements recorded before the magistrate would later be used in the court 
for appropriate legal action.

On Thursday, the government included the names of 8 MQM leaders on the exit 
control list after the revelations made by Mirza. According to the sources, the 
decision came after death row convict Mirza levelled grave allegations against 
Mr Hussain and other party leaders including Babar Ghauri and governor Sindh 
Ishratul Ebad.

Meanwhile, Pakistan on Thursday hanged 4 more death-row prisoners, including 
two brothers, as it postponed by 3 days the execution of a man whose family 
alleged he was a minor at the time of crime and that his confession was 
extracted through torture.

3 prisoners were executed in Rawalpindi's Adiala Jail while the 4th was hanged 
to death in Mianwali Jail. Brothers Mohammad Asghar and Ghulam Mohammad were 
awarded the death penalty by a district and sessions judge for killing 2 of 
their relatives in 1996. Another convict Gulistan Zaman was hanged for killing 
a man in 1998.

The execution of Shafqat Hussain was postponed for 72 hours just a few hours 
before his hanging was scheduled to take place Thursday morning. Hussain was 
convicted by an anti-terrorism court for kidnapping and killing a 7-year-old 
boy. Rights bodies allege that Hussain was just 14 at the time of crime in 2004 
and that he was tortured to confess the killing, while the jail record showed 
him as 23 years old.

(source: The Asian Age)

****************************

UN asks Pak to reinstate moratorium on death penalty



Expressing deep concern at the increasing number of executions in Pakistan, the 
United Nations has asked Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif government to reinstate 
the moratorium on death penalty as soon as possible.

"The UN has consistently called for an unequivocal end to the execution of 
anyone, anywhere, who is convicted of committing a crime when they are under 
the age of 18," a statement from the UN office in Pakistan said.

The world body also voiced concern at the Pakistani government's recent 
announcement that it has withdrawn its moratorium on the death penalty for all 
cases, not only those related to terrorism.

Among those executed there are persons who were minors when the offence was 
committed and more than 8,000 prisoners are on death row, the statement added.

"The UN in Pakistan urges the Government to reinstate its moratorium as soon as 
possible. We stand ready to support it in doing so and to assist in 
strengthening the existing justice system if so requested," the statement 
added.

The UN expressed concern over cases where the death penalty was handed down to 
minors but welcomed reviews of these cases.

More than 160 UN Member States with a variety of legal systems and religious 
backgrounds have either abolished the death penalty or do not practice it.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein has expressed 
deep regret at the resumption of executions in Pakistan, stressing that no 
judiciary - anywhere - can be infallible.

There is no scientific proof, according to the UN, that the death penalty 
serves as a deterrent or contributes to combating crime or violent extremism.

"While we appreciate the need for effective counter- terrorism measures to 
protect people, including children, such action must strengthen human rights 
and be proportionate and necessary in a democratic society," the UN said.

Under international treaties, in particular the International Covenant on Civil 
and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Pakistan 
legally committed itself to ensuring due process and not imposing the death 
penalty.

(source: Deccan Herald)








CHINA:

Errors found in China murder case 20 years after execution



Lawyers claimed on Thursday to have found errors during a rough review of a 
1994 rape-murder case concerning Nie Shubin, who was executed 20 years ago.

Li Shuting, an attorneys for Nie's families, told Xinhua that he found several 
"evident errors" while duplicating Nie's case files, most of which involve 
legal procedure.

"I was astonished. The errors are so obvious that we can see them just at a 
glance," Li said.

For instance, Nie was executed on April 27, 1995, but the signature on his 
petition for appeal was inscribed on May 13, which is patently impossible. He 
also said the handwriting appears different from Nie's.

Nie was executed in 1995 at the age of 21 for the rape and murder of a woman in 
Hebei's provincial capital, Shijiazhuang. The case reemerged when another man, 
Wang Shujin, insisted that he was guilty and Nie innocent.

Wang, 48, was apprehended by police in 2005 for three unconnected rape and 
murder cases, and confessed to a rape and murder with the same facts as in 
Nie's case. Hebei Higher People's Court, which approved the death penalty for 
Nie in 1995, rejected Wang's request for a retrial in 2013 and still believes 
Nie is the murderer.

Judicial impartiality has been openly questioned recently in China and in 
December, the Supreme People's Court ordered the Shandong Higher People's Court 
to review the case.

"We will go over the court files and submit our opinion as soon as possible," 
Li said.

The Shandong court will reopen the trial if it is concluded that the case was 
wrongly judged.

(source: Xinhua News Agency)








INDONESIA:

Bali 9 Executions: Indonesian Court Postpones Clemency Appeal Hearing For 2 
Australian Convicts



The impending execution of two Australian nationals convicted of drug 
trafficking in Indonesia has been delayed yet again, after a local court on 
Thursday postponed hearing a clemency appeal. The Indonesian government has 
rejected earlier requests for clemency for Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, 
the alleged ring leaders of the Bali 9 group.

In the upcoming hearing, lawyers for the two convicts are expected to provide 
more information to the court in a bid to overturn the government's rejection 
of an earlier clemency plea. The hearing has now been pushed forward by a week 
to March 25, and the court will not decide the case until after April 1, media 
reports said. Indonesia's tough stance against drug trafficking, which it 
typically punishes with the death penalty, has been criticized by several 
countries, including Australia, and international human rights groups.

"The hearing for both cases has been delayed until March 25 for our side to 
submit evidence. March 30 will be their (the defense) turn," Leonard Arfan, the 
convicts' lawyer, told Reuters.

Chan and Sukumaran have been transferred from the Kerobokan prison in Bali to 
the prison island of Nusakambangan, where the executions are scheduled to take 
place. The 2 are among a group of 10 people convicted of smuggling drugs and 
scheduled to be executed by firing squad. The other convicts reportedly include 
citizens of France, Brazil, the Philippines, Ghana, Nigeria and Indonesia. The 
Australian nationals were arrested in 2005 and sentenced to death in the 
following year for leading a heroin-smuggling operation.

Australia has been trying to negotiate a clemency deal for Chan and Sukumaran, 
who were originally scheduled to be executed in February. The country has also 
offered to pay Indonesia prison expenses to incarcerate the duo in return for 
the latter exempting the duo from the death penalty. However, Indonesia 
rejected the offer last week.

"We emphasize that this is not an issue of negotiation," Armanatha Nasir, a 
spokesman for the Indonesian foreign office, said, at the time, adding: "This 
is upholding the law. If a country starts to negotiate law, that is a form of 
violation. So I emphasize that there is no negotiation."

(source: International Business Times)

********************

Court delays decision on death row convicts



2 Australian drug convicts on death row in Indonesia will not be executed this 
month after a court on Thursday postponed their appeal hearing against the 
rejection of a request for presidential clemency.

Australians Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan have already been transferred to 
the prison island of Nusakambangan, where the executions will take place.

The 2 Australians are among a group of 10 drug convicts due to be executed 
together by firing squad on Nusakambangan. Others in the group include citizens 
of France, Brazil, the Philippines, Ghana, Nigeria and Indonesia.

At least 1/2 of the convicts have ongoing legal challenges.Sukumaran and Chan 
were arrested in 2005 as the ringleaders of a plot to smuggle heroin out of 
Indonesia.

Australia has been pursuing an 11th-hour campaign to save the lives of the 2 
members of the so-called Bali 9, but President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo has refused 
to budge.

"The hearing for both cases has been delayed until March 25 for our side to 
submit evidence. March 30 will be their [the defenses] turn," said Leonard 
Arfan, lawyer for the 2 Australians as quoted by Reuters.

Judge Ujang Abdullah said final arguments would be heard on April 1 and a 
verdict would be announced soon afterwards.

The attorney general has said he will not set a date for the executions until 
of the legal processes are completed for all 10 on death row.Vice President 
Jusuf Kalla told Reuters on Wednesday it could take weeks or even months for 
the executions to take place.

Indonesia has harsh penalties for drug trafficking and resumed executions in 
2013 after a 5-year hiatus. 5 foreigners were among 6 people executed in 
January, the 1st executions since President Jokowi took office in October.

With the upcoming executions, Indonesia will have exercised the death penalty 
more times in a single year than ever before.

***************************

National scene: Pakistani arrested for drugs



The National Narcotics Agency (BNN) arrested on Thursday a Pakistani identified 
only as GS for allegedly attempting to smuggle 15 kilograms of methamphetamine 
and 22,000 ecstasy pills into the country through Muara Karang, North Jakarta.

The drugs were wrapped in plastic and concealed in a box containing salted 
fish.The BNN also arrested an Indonesian identified only as IA, 45, who worked 
as a guide for GS.

"The meth and ecstasy pills were allegedly from Malaysia. GS planned to take 
the drugs to Depok, West Java, where he lives," BNN spokesman Sr. Comr. Slamet 
Pribadi said in Jakarta.

GS asked IA to be his guide because he did not know the way from Jakarta to 
Depok. As payment for his services, IA was to get 1 kilogram of meth.

Both GS and IA will be charged under the 2009 Narcotics Law, which carried the 
death penalty, Slamet said. According to the BNN's preliminary investigation, 
GS was part of an Indonesian-Malaysian-Pakistani drug ring. He also reportedly 
has a connection to 3 Chinese drug dealers arrested with 44 kilograms of 
crystal meth in Central Jakarta last Friday.

(source for both: Jakarta Post)




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