[Deathpenalty] death penalty news----worldwide

Rick Halperin rhalperi at smu.edu
Fri Oct 14 09:54:51 CDT 2016






Oct. 14



BELARUS:

Europe's last dictatorship brings back the death penalty----Belarus has resumed 
sentencing people to death, just 8 months after the EU dropped sanctions, a 
study has found.

The last European country to retain capital punishment has resumed sentencing 
people to death since EU sanctions against its president were dropped this 
year, according to a landmark investigation.

In recent months Belarus has executed 1 person and condemned 4 more to death, 
with more cases pending in which capital punishment is likely, according to 
investigators with the Paris-based human rights organisation FIDH, and the 
Viasna human rights centre in Minsk.

Described by investigators as a "scandal at the heart of Europe", about 400 
people have been executed in Belarus since independence in 1991 - more than 1 a 
month.

The human rights report documents the physical and psychological abuse used to 
extract confessions and the shocking conditions in which death row inmates are 
kept and later executed.

Interviews with local journalists and lawyers reveal a practice shrouded in 
secrecy, with statistics on the numbers killed by the state closely guarded by 
Belarus's government.

The time and locations of the executions, as well as the places of burial, are 
also kept classified, with the bodies of prisoners never released to families.

Sacha Koulaeva, head of the FIDH's eastern Europe and central Asia desk, said 
the abolition of the death penalty in Belarus was an achievable goal if the 
European Union put pressure on the government. "We would like to mobilise the 
international community to call for Europe to be a death penalty-free zone," 
she said.

Koulaeva said evidence suggested international intervention had already proved 
effective: while the EU was negotiating lifting sanctions between 2013 and 
2015, executions almost stopped.

--NOTE--

Sanctions were imposed on Belarus by the EU and US after the 2010 presidential 
election, during which protests were violently put down and opposition figures 
jailed by the intelligence services. The sanctions affected 170 people, 
including President Lukashenko himself. Brussels suspended them for four months 
in October 2015 after Mr. Lukashenko was re-elected peacefully (though in 
distinctly dubious circumstances). It agreed to drop them altogether in 
February this year, citing "improving EU-Belarus relations". There is evidence 
that as Mr. Lukashenko warmed to the West he has cooled towards Russia, 
hitherto his close ally, though it remains a member of the Moscow-led Eurasian 
Economic Union. In particular, Minsk has hosted Ukraine peace talks and 
remained neutral over the conflict.

Maya Foa, a director at the UK human rights group Reprieve, said the report 
showed the EU needed to do more to end the practice.

"The EU and member states are regularly vocal about their opposition to the 
death penalty, and this is now more important than ever," she said. "Executions 
are on the rise around the world and it is critical that the EU not only stands 
by its 'strong and principled opposition to the death penalty', but actively 
advances this principle in its diplomatic and trading relationships with 
executing states."

In response to the report's finding, members of the EU mission to Belarus, 
including the deputy head, Jim Couzens, called for an immediate moratorium on 
the practice.

The death penalty was introduced in Belarus during Soviet rule as a punishment 
for murder, "economic crimes" (such as producing counterfeit money, bribery and 
speculation), as well as "counter-revolutionary acts" including treason and 
espionage. Since 1991, the government has continued to apply several clauses of 
the Soviet-era criminal code, the last of the former USSR countries to do so.

Alexander Lukashenko, who assumed office in 1994, has broadened the powers of 
the president over his 22 years in office, earning Belarus the nickname of 
Europe's "last dictatorship".

The authorities and state media outlets enthusiastically defend the use of the 
death penalty by claiming its use reduces crime. However, new analysis by the 
FIDH and Viasna shows this justification to be false: in 2015, the internal 
affairs ministry reported 4,018 counts of serious crime, an increase of 17% on 
2014.

Andrei Paluda, coordinator of the campaign against the death penalty led by 
Viasna, told researchers the conditions in which inmates are held had 
deteriorated. He spoke to witnesses who have worked in Belarus's death row 
facilities, who described cells just 3 metres large, fitted with video cameras 
to watch inmates at all times.

A former staff member of Pretrial Detention Centre no 1 in the centre of 
Minsk,told Viasna: "From the very beginning, they face maximum security 
restrictions ... The rules prohibit them from lying or sitting on the plank 
beds from 6am to 10pm. They usually walk around the cell all day long."

Another former staff member said death row inmates were kept in complete 
isolation and treated as if they are no longer "among the living". Those 
condemned to death are kept without any information about their execution date, 
a practice Koulaeva described as "cynical" and one that distresses the 
prisoners.

The report also reveals the trauma inflicted on the families of those sentenced 
to death.

Though the Belarusian criminal code stipulates that one family member must be 
notified in the event of an execution, it does not specify how. In most cases, 
families learn that an execution has been carried out only upon the delivery of 
personal belongings after death.

Tamara Sialiun, whose 27-year-old son Pavel was convicted of 2 counts of murder 
and mutilating a dead body in 2012, told investigators that the first she knew 
of her son's execution was when a package arrived containing his prison 
uniform. He had been shot in the head.

"After everything that happened, I received a notification from the post office 
to pick up a parcel from Minsk. It was the robe and boots of my son. When I got 
home, I just didn't know what to do," said Sialiun, 1 of 3 women interviewed. 
She has since filed a complaint to the UN human rights committee over the 
treatment she and her son received.

Koulaeva said the report painted a vivid portrait of the process by which men 
were being convicted and killed, a process she described as deeply flawed and 
carried out with "total disregard to international obligations".

"The conditions in which this action takes place are terrible," she said. "[It 
is] a terrible ritual, and a terrible thing to witness."

(source: The World Weekly)





SERBIA:

58% of Serbs Vote to Bring Back the Death Penalty - Poll


If a referendum on the need to bring back the death penalty was held today a 
record 58 % of Serbs would say "yes," according to the latest poll conducted by 
the public advocacy group Serbia Against the Death Penalty.

The rash of shocking crimes recently committed in Serbia, like the rape and 
murder of a 3-year-old girl, would certainly make anyone see red. In an 
interview with Sputnik, sociologist Sandra Radenovic said, however, that the 
public wrath was in large part excited by the local media's sensationalist 
coverage of such incidents which he described as a new tactic all too eagerly 
embraced by Serbian media.

"They are breaking the most elementary norms of journalistic ethics by 
constantly bombarding people with all sorts of grisly details. We emotionally 
react to this of course and immediately think about what we would do to this 
bastard. The problem is, however, that in our thoughts, we become just like him 
or even worse," Sandra Radenovic told Sputnik. Virtually every 3rd citizen of 
Serbia voted for capital punishment with only 11 % saying a flat "no."

The death penalty was abolished in Serbia in 2001 but it remains very much 
alive in the minds of the people who fear criminals feel no compassion for 
murderers, child molesters and drug dealers. They simply want them dead, 
criminologist Zlatko Nikolic said.

Compassion is something that comes to us as we become socialized. It doesn't 
"turn off" our innate instinct of self-protection though and we are ready to 
fight for our kids, to stay alive, for our home and our sources of food and 
water. The mere fact that while answering the pollsters' questions, people do 
not consider compassion means that the basic instincts they are endowed with at 
birth prevail," Nikolic added. Sandra Radenovic still sees this as a sign of 
the demoralization of Serbian society.

"The issue of the death penalty is an ethical or, rather, bioethical issue. 
It's about the value of human life, whether some people's lives have less value 
than others," she said. Zlatko Nikolic pointed to the selective and very slow 
judicial process as a reason why so many people voted for the return of capital 
punishment.

"The Anglo-Saxon judicial system we have today with all these endless 
negotiations with criminals is a sign of a weak state, that's why people want 
to take the law into their own hands. Uncertainty is killing your heart and 
soul. If you see someone who caused you harm being tried forever you start 
asking questions. In Serbia and just about anywhere else people don't 
understand why the courts take so much time handing down sentences. But, as 
lawyers say, 'it's better to let 100 guilty people walk then execute someone 
who is innocent,'" Nikolic said.

He added that at the start of her 1st term as British Prime Minister Margaret 
Thatcher bent under public pressure and brought back the death penalty. This 
didn't help as the average crime rate never changed.

(source: sputniknews.com)






TAIWAN:

Supreme Court upholds acquittal of man sentenced to death


The Supreme Court upheld Thursday a High Court decision that Hsu Tzu-chiang, 
who has repeatedly appealed convictions for kidnapping, extortion and murder of 
a real estate businessman in 1995, was not guilty of all the charges.

Hsu was declared innocent by the High Court last year in the ninth retrial of 
his case, in which he was accused of playing a role in the September 1995 
kidnapping and murder of Huang Chun-shu, a real estate broker, whose kidnappers 
originally demanded a ransom of NT$70 million (US$2.2 million).

The High Court overturned the conviction last year, as the ruling in his 9th 
retrial found that there were major flaws and inconsistencies in the evidence 
and testimonies.

Hsu is 1 of 3 men sentenced to death in 2000 for the murder.

The 2 other suspects - Huang Chun-chi and Chen Yi-lung - were found guilty of 
being the main perpetrators, and were each given the death penalty.

During their trials, the 2 men said Hsu also participated in the kidnapping.

The High Court upheld District Court rulings on Huang and Chen, and the Supreme 
Court rejected their appeals in 2000, making their death sentences final. 
Extraordinary appeals were filed on the behalf of the pair and Hsu in the 
following years.

Activists and Hsu's lawyers criticized Hsu's conviction on the grounds that it 
was based on the confessions of his co-defendants.

(source: The China Post)






JAPAN:

Questioning capital punishment


The Japan Federation of Bar Associations' recent call to abolish capital 
punishment should serve as a catalyst for informed and broad public 
discussions. Both the Justice Ministry and the lawyer group have an important 
role to play in making necessary information available to ensure those 
discussions are meaningful. The ministry's responsibility is especially heavy - 
the secrecy surrounding this nation???s death penalty system is often blamed 
for the lack of public discourse on the issue.

The bar federation adopted a resolution calling for ending capital punishment 
at its Oct. 6 meeting in Fukui for promoting protection of human rights, with 
546 of the 786 participants supporting it. Some lawyers who support capital 
punishment criticize that it is unreasonable for the organization not to accept 
letters of attorney from members who could not attend the meeting. Still, the 
declaration by the organization comprising some 37,600 Japanese lawyers and 
hundreds of registered foreign legal professionals is significant. The 
federation in the past always stopped short of calling for an outright end to 
death penalty, although at a similar meeting 5 years ago it called for starting 
broad discussions on abolishing capital punishment and requested that the 
justice minister suspend executions.

A key factor behind the move is an international trend. According to Amnesty 
International, 102 countries had abolished the death penalty as of the end of 
2015, a sharp increase from 60 in 1996, and another 38 countries have not 
carried out executions for 10 years or longer. Of the 35 OECD member countries, 
only Japan, the United States and South Korea retain capital punishment as an 
institution, although South Korea's last execution was in 1997. In 2014, the 
United Nations Human Rights Committee urged Japan to "give due consideration in 
the abolition of the death penalty."

Since the current Abe administration came to power in December 2012, a total of 
16 inmates have been executed. The bar federation calls for abolishing capital 
punishment by 2020, when the U.N. Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal 
Justice is to be held in Japan.

More fundamental factors behind the resolution are inherent problems in the 
death penalty system, including its vengeful nature as criminal punishment and 
its cruelty. While noting that even the worst offenders stand a chance of 
reintegrating with society, the federation charges that if an innocent person 
or an offender not truly deserving death is executed, the human rights 
violation is irrecoverable. The risk of false charges and convictions have been 
highlighted by the fact that 4 inmates on death row were exonerated in retrials 
in the 1980s and by the freeing in 2014 of Iwao Hakamada after spending 48 
years behind bars. He had been sentenced to death for the 1966 murders of 4 
people on the strength of evidence apparently fabricated by the police.

Supporters of the death penalty refer to the sentiments of crime victims and 
their family members - who are inclined to think that killers deserve execution 
- as well as public opinion that favors capital punishment. In the 2014 version 
of a survey conducted every 5 years by the Cabinet Office, 80.3 % of 
respondents said the death penalty is unavoidable, while only 9.7 % called for 
abolishing the system.

At the same time, 40.5 % of those who endorsed the death penalty system said it 
can be abolished in the future "if the situation changes." Of all the 
respondents, 37.7 % said the death penalty should be scrapped if life 
imprisonment without parole is introduced. Currently, a person serving a life 
sentence has a chance of being paroled after serving at least 10 years in 
prison. The JFBA's declaration proposed introduction of either life 
imprisonment without parole or granting parole only after the inmate has spent 
20 to 25 years behind bars - in place of hanging.

But discussions about capital punishment should not just focus on substituting 
stricter varieties of life in prison. The Justice Ministry should not only 
provide sufficient information about Japan???s system but study and disclose 
criminal punishment policies and public opinions on the death penalty in other 
countries. This kind of information is indispensable for informative 
discussions.

The government should gather and provide information as to whether capital 
punishment is an effective deterrent to crime, including through comparison of 
examples of countries that maintain the death penalty and those that have 
abolished it. Relying just on public opinion endorsing capital punishment to 
justify its existence does not stand up to reason.

Another point to consider is whether the treatment of death row inmates is 
humane enough. Such prisoners in Japan are kept in solitary confinement and 
their communication with people outside is tightly restricted. Currently, the 
ministry doesn't give advance notice of executions to the inmates nor to their 
lawyers and relatives, and it is not clear what criteria is used in deciding 
when a prisoner is to be executed.

Since the introduction of the lay judge system in 2009, it is now possible for 
ordinary citizens to take part in handing down a death penalty. That alone 
calls for more public discussions on capital punishment. Relevant authorities 
and parties should not dismiss the JFBA's call but use it as material for the 
public to think about the issue, irrespective of which position they take on 
the matter.

(source: Editorial, The Japan Times)


IRAN:

Public Defender Challenges Execution Order Against Iranian Child Bride for 
Alleged Crime Committed as Juvenile


The execution order against Zeinab Sekaanvand Lankarani, who was married off at 
15-years-old to the man she allegedly killed 2 years later, is being challenged 
by her public defender. Lankarani, imprisoned at Urmia Central Prison in 
northwestern Iran, is accused of killing her husband when she was 17 years old.

"Zeinab admitted to the murder while she was being interrogated, but in court 
she denied it and said her husband's brother carried out the crime and told her 
to take the blame," Rita Tootoonchi, Lankarani's court-appointed lawyer, told 
the International Campaign for Human Rights on October 12, 2016. "In the 
Appeals Court I presented evidence that showed Zeinab may not have been the 
murderer ... Zeinab is right-handed, but the direction of the knife wound 
showed that it had to have come from the opposite hand."

"I am hoping my request will be accepted and the execution will be postponed by 
the Supreme Court after considering the fact that she was under 18 years old at 
the time of the crime," she added.

Tootoonchi also told the Campaign that she had not been in contact with her 
client since she was informed by judicial authorities on October 3 that 
Lankarani's execution would be carried out "within the next few weeks, unless 
the victim's family agrees to stop it."

"I asked the victim's family to pardon Zeinab and told them that it's not 
really clear that she was the murderer. She may have had an accomplice who 
actually made the blows. But unfortunately the victim's family have not agreed 
and they want retribution," she said.

"All I can do at this point is ask the court to consider Article 91 of the 
Islamic Penal Code, so that maybe then her life could be spared. Unfortunately, 
Zeinab does not have anyone to look after her case, and the victim's family has 
not pardoned her, unfortunately," added Tootoonchi.

According to Article 91: "... if mature people under 18 years do not realize 
the nature of the crime committed or its prohibition, or if there is 
uncertainty about their full mental development, according to their age, they 
shall be sentenced to the punishments prescribed in this chapter."

According to the International Covenant on Civil Political Rights and the 
Convention on the Rights of the Child, it is illegal to execute someone for 
crimes committed under the age of eighteen. Iran is party to both treaties. 
Nonetheless, Iran remains one of a handful of countries still putting juveniles 
to death. Lankarani was born in Maku, in Kurdistan Province. She was arrested 
on March 1, 2012 and charged with killing Hossein Sarmadi, who she was married 
off to 2 years earlier at the age of 15. She was sentenced to death on October 
22, 2014 by Branch 2 of the Urmia Criminal Court. The ruling was later 
confirmed by the Supreme Court, the Kurdistan Human Rights Network reported on 
October 4, 2016.

According to official Iranian statistics, tens of thousands of girls under the 
age of 15 are married off by their families each year in Iran. The United 
Nations has categorized child marriage as a human rights violation. Civil and 
children's rights activists in Iran have opposed religious conservatives who 
advocate child marriage.

(source: Iran Human Focus)

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

Iran Holds the Highest Number of Executions Per Capita in the World


The mayor's office in Paris' 1st district hosted an exposition into executions 
in Iran on October 10, The World Day Against the Death Penalty.

The exposition, organized by the Support Committee for Human Rights in Iran 
(SCHRI), featured speeches from politicians, human rights activists and 
witnesses of human rights violations from Iran.

It focused, most notably, on the 1988 Iranian Massacre but also the continued 
execution of political prisoners which has been denounced by the U.N. Secretary 
General.

Jean-Francois Legaret, the mayor of Paris' 1st district, said that there is "a 
battle to fight against the death penalty and other barbaric acts in Iran".

He stated that the West must not negotiate with Iran's barbaric regime.

Henri Leclerc, Honorable President of the League for Human Rights, said that 
the West could not let Iran's extensive use of the death penalty go 
unchallenged and warned that "unpunished crimes will recur."

During 1988, the Iranian Regime murdered 30,000 political prisoners; mainly 
members of the People's Mojahidin Organization of Iran (PMOI). Further evidence 
of the Iranian Regime's role in the massacre was revealed in August after an 
audio recording of Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri admonishing a Death 
Committee was leaked online.

Speaking of the 1988 Massacre, Leclerc said: "It is a crime against humanity 
when we know that thousands were executed while they were in prison. This must 
be denounced and we must act. We have sufficient materials. I hope that the 
U.N. conducts an investigation which brings those responsible to trial."

Leclerc said that the victims "died for liberty around the world; these men, 
women, and children have a right to justice. If we leave such crimes 
unpunished, it is our future that will truly be tragic."

The speakers emphasized the importance of bringing those responsible for the 
1988 Massacre before an international court to account for their "crimes 
against humanity".

Jacques Boutault, the mayor of Paris' 2nd district thanked the Iranian 
Resistance and those who fought to bring human rights to Iran. He highlighted 
that the Iranian regime is complicit in Syrian Civil War and called on the 
French government to denounce Iran's crimes in Syria.

Iran holds the highest number of executions per capita in the world and 
executed 1,000 people in 2015 alone.

(source: iranfocus)






KENYA:

CJ nominee David Maraga says MPs to decide fate of death penalty


The Chief Justice nominee, Justice David Maraga, has stated that the 
responsibility of withholding or abolishing the death penalty rests with 
Parliament.

Speaking when he appeared before the National Assembly's Justice and Legal 
Affairs Committee for vetting, Justice Maraga, who was nominated for the 
position by the Judicial Service Commission (JSC), said that as the Chief 
Justice, he would not have any powers to decide the fate of death penalty since 
it has to be abolished through an Act of Parliament.

"The world is moving away from the death penalty and this issue is also being 
debated in other countries. It is a fundamental issue but can only be dealt 
with by the Parliament; the court can only come up with principles of law 
within the given legal framework," he said.

(source: citizentv.co.ke)

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

Kenya takes death penalty debate to the people


The 2nd and final leg of the Kenyan national public debate on capital 
punishment has begun.

The debate is to solicit views from Kenyans on the administration of capital 
punishment and management of capital offences.

The public discussion, which is being spearheaded by the Power of Mercy 
Advisory Committee (POMAC) and National Crime Research Centre (NCRC), will be 
conducted in 28 counties countrywide, within the next 2 months.

The debate provides a platform for Kenyans to express their opinions on capital 
offences and what form of punishment capital offenders should be subjected to.

According to the Kenyan law, 5 types of offences attract capital punishment. 
These are: murder, treason, and robbery with violence, attempted robbery with 
violence and oathing with intent to commit a felony.

After the debate, the committee will document findings of the public views and 
make appropriate recommendations.

The 1st public dialogue took place in June in the first 19 counties.

In 2009, former President Mwai Kibaki commuted the sentences of all those on 
death row to life imprisonment. The decision affected over 4,000 prisoners and 
at the time was said to be one of the largest commutation of death sentences 
anywhere in the world.

According to the Kenya Prisons Act, executions are to be carried out by 
hanging. The last hanging in Kenya took place in 1987 after the plotters of the 
August 1982 coup attempt were sentenced to death.

(source: iol.co.za)






MALAYSIA:

Filipino fit to enter plea, stand trial: Insp


A 36-year-old Filipino charged with murder is fit to enter his plea and stand 
trial, the Magistrate's Court heard on Wednesday.

Inspector Azaman Hamat, prosecuting, informed Magistrate Jessica Ombou Kakayun 
on the outcome of a report obtained from Hospital Mesra Bukit Padang on Ismail 
Rasad.

Ismail was referred to the psychiatric centre months ago following a request 
from his counsel to observe his mental condition.

Azaman, however, applied for another mention date since the medical report has 
not been received yet.

The court fixed Nov 23 for mention of the case.

Ismail, a Bajau holding the IMM13 document, is accused of committing the 
offence on one Md Adzmar Alex, 19, also a Bajau holding the IMM13 document at 
11.30pm on May 1 at Kampung Rampayan.

No plea was taken from him under Section 302 of the Penal Code which carries 
the death penalty on conviction.

Ismail was represented by counsel Timothy Daut.

(source: Daily Express)



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