Oct. 20


AFRICA:

Foes of Death Penalty Making Gradual Gains in Africa


The worst thing about death row at the notorious Luzira Maximum Prison
outside Kampala is not the grim physical conditions, although Edmary
Mpagi, who knows the place well, says they are grim indeed.

Nor is it the bad food or the occasionally violent cellmates. It is the
waiting that can drive a prisoner mad, Mr. Mpagi said, the years of
anticipation, never knowing exactly when the hangman will arrive.

That waiting is all the worse if one happens to be innocent, as Mr. Mpagi
was found to be after living for 18 years in the shadow of the gallows at
Luzira.

The man Mr. Mpagi was convicted of killing in 1982 was actually alive and
well for all the years Mr. Mpagi sat behind bars. There was fabricated
evidence, coerced testimony and a generally slipshod trial - all things
that legal experts say are not as uncommon as they ought to be here.

Mr. Mpagi emerged from prison in July 2000 showing surprisingly little
bitterness. Much of his time now is spent on a campaign against
government-sponsored killing.

He is part of a growing movement trying to wipe out the death penalty in
Africa. The critics say they face formidable obstacles from politicians
and everyday people fed up with lawbreaking and intent on severely
punishing those who engage in it.

Religion is one of the hurdles. Islamic courts in Nigeria continue to
sentence women found guilty of adultery to death by stoning, although
higher courts have repeatedly blocked such killings.

The biblical eye for an eye is also a factor. In one bizarre case in
Congo, a Kinshasa court sentenced a prosecutor to death because he had
been conducting his own private trials of defendants, not only sentencing
them to death but also executing them himself. Soon he will probably die
too.

But foes of the death penalty say they are making steady progress, with
fewer Africans than ever before being hanged, beaten, shot, shocked,
stoned or poisoned by their governments.

Fifteen years ago only one African country, the island of Cape Verde off
Africa's west coast, did not have capital punishment on its books,
activists say. Today 10 countries have outlawed the death penalty,
according to a recent tally compiled by Amnesty International, and another
10 have abolished it in practice.

The anti-execution movement has been especially powerful in West Africa,
where the number of countries in the Economic Community of West African
States that have either banned executions or halted them has risen to 10,
from one.

Southern Africa has also been moving away from capital punishment. It is
outlawed in 5 countries in the Southern African Development Community:
Angola, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia and South Africa. While it is still
on the books in Malawi and Zambia, the presidents of those countries have
said they will not to sign execution orders.

In Kenya, President Mwai Kibaki has commuted the sentences of nearly 200
people on death row and vowed not to allow any government-sponsored
killings on his watch.

Tallying how many executions occur each year in Africa is difficult,
activists say, because many countries carry out the killings quietly to
avoid unwanted attention. Not so in Uganda, where 417 people languish on
death row, and where radio stations inform listeners of coming executions
and daily papers have been known to recount the grisly details on their
front pages.

The last executions in Uganda were in March 2003, when military firing
squads killed 3 soldiers convicted of murder. The gallows at Luzira, the
main prison where civilians await execution, have not been used since
1999, when 28 men were hanged.

Uganda would seem to be fertile ground for death penalty foes. It was
here, after all, that Idi Amin vented his rage on his populace, unleashing
soldiers on anyone deemed a critic. During his brutal rule in the 1970's
Mr. Amin had no use for a death row. People were just summarily shot.

Those days are past. Relative calm has come to the country, although there
is still a rebel insurgency in the north and human rights groups continue
to criticize the government for sporadic acts of torture.

But it is crime that many consider the biggest hazard, and that is what
motivates death penalty advocates. Those who dare to take the life of
another, violate a woman or commit a crime while wielding a gun ought to
pay with their lives, proponents say.

What about false prosecutions, opponents like Mr. Mpagi ask. What about
cruel and unusual punishment? What about evidence that suggests that
having a death penalty does not deter people from killing, raping or
robbing?

Then there are the less conventional arguments offered by opponents of the
death penalty.

Some critics point out that the death penalty is a phenomenon introduced
into the Ugandan legal code by British colonialists. Before colonialism,
they add, African tribes preferred mediation to retribution.

Joseph Etima, the commissioner of prisons, who is also a critic, argues
that such killings are unfair to the prison guards who must end the
prisoners' lives.

Executioners become drunkards and lose their minds after years of manning
the noose, Mr. Etima says. "The first execution they do throws them out of
balance," he said. "They isolate themselves from others. They suffer
hallucinations. Socially, people fear them, even their families. Everybody
keeps away from these guys out of fear that they are going to hang them."

Opponents hoped to wipe out capital punishment this year as the country
goes about rewriting its Constitution. But the blue-ribbon commission
charged with reviewing the document recommended replacing the gallows with
some other method that "ensures instant death."

Godfrey Ssebuwufu, an activist with Uganda Citizen's Rescue, puckers his
lips and contorts his face when asked about that decision. An ardent death
penalty foe, Mr. Ssebuwufu says he opposes capital punishment on human
rights grounds and will not speculate whether lethal injection or
electrocution is more humane than the noose.

Mr. Ssebuwufu is a detective, right down to his long trench coat. He pores
over court documents and sniffs around the city seeking clues that might
spring some of those on death row. In one case he has been researching,
the man sentenced to death for electrocuting his wife did not have
electricity in his house at the time of the crime.

It was a similar investigation that dug up enough evidence to free Mr.
Mpagi from jail. Now on the outside, he offers stomach-churning tales
about life on death row to anybody who will listen.

He tells about how he was sometimes forced to wash the gallows. He tells
about hearing the crank turning, lifting the prisoner up, and the awful,
indescribable sound as the prisoner then came plummeting back down.

"It was 18 years and three months that I spent in there," Mr. Mpagi said.
"There wasn't one day I didn't think I was going to die. Others should not
go through what I went through - the guilty ones or the other innocent
ones like me."

(source: New York Times)






VIETNAM:

Vietnam considers new death penalty execution method


The Vietnamese government has just assigned relevant agencies to research
into a new way of conducting death penalty, local newspaper Youth reported
Wednesday.

Under a recent instruction of Prime Minister Phan Van Khai, the ministries
of Justice and Public Security, in coordination with other relevant
bodies, are to look into the possibility of changing the country's current
method under which death sentence receivers are executed by firing squad.

The prime minister also asked the 2 ministries to consider the possibility
of allowing relatives of executed criminals to freely bury their bodies by
themselves. Now, the bodies are buriedwithin execution grounds which are
guarded by local security men.

Bodies are sometimes taken away from the execution grounds with the help
of guardsmen who receive thousands of US dollars from relatives of
executed people. The corpses of Truong Van Cam or NamCam, most notorious
criminal in Vietnam, and three of his underlings are reported to have been
taken away from the executionground in the country's Ho Chi Minh City with
a price of 200 million Vietnamese dong (12,700 dollars).

(source: Xinhuanet)






SINGAPORE/AUSTRALIA:

Fate of Australian man on Singapore's death row to be decided


A Singapore court is due to decide the fate of an Australian man who has
spent 8 months on death row for drug trafficking.

Nguyen Tuong Van, 23, from the southern city of Melbourne, was found with
400 grams of heroin strapped to his back when he was arrested at Changi
International Airport in December 2002.

Nguyen appealed against the sentence and conviction in July, with his
barrister arguing there was a discrepancy in the quantity of the drugs and
the constitutional basis of Singapore's death penalty.

If the appeal is dismissed he will face the death penalty by hanging.

Nguyen's barrister, Lex Lasry has returned to Singapore for the verdict.

"I last saw him when the appeal was last heard and he was in reasonably
good spirits," he said.

"He thought the appeal had gone well, he was encouraged by the interest
the court took in his case."

Mr Lasry says it is going be a very difficult day, depending what happens,
and very stressful for his client.

(source: Radio Australia News)



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