death penalty news

October 25, 2004


TAJIKISTAN:

Controversy over suspension of death penalty

"A man raped his own mother, and then killed her. To hide the traces, he 
decided to burn the corpse," Sharifmat Rajapov, a judge from Tajikistan's 
southern Khatlon province, told IRIN, recalling a case he had recently 
presided over.

The judge recounted the story to support his argument that the country 
should scrap a controversial moratorium on the death penalty that came into 
force in July this year. "Now people are not afraid of anything. Earlier, 
fear of the death penalty constrained them somehow. Now that the moratorium 
on capital punishment has been declared, this will untie the hands of 
criminals."

Lilia Yaharieva, human rights officer and legal adviser at the UN bureau 
for peace-building, disagrees. She believes that there is no place for the 
death penalty in a civilised society. "It has already been proved many 
times that the death penalty cannot serve as a deterrent," she told IRIN. 
"When someone is going to commit a crime, as a rule they do not think of 
the consequences."

Yaharieva believes the moratorium on the death penalty is an opportunity to 
prevent miscarriages of justice. A Russian mass murderer, known as 
Chikatilo, killed and dismembered about 70 women. By the time he was 
caught, two people had been executed after having been found guilty of the 
crimes committed by Chikatilo.

"This is one of the steps undertaken by the government of Tajikistan on the 
humanisation of criminal legislation," Alikhon Rakhmonov, the Tajik deputy 
justice minister, told IRIN.

The decision to call a halt to capital punishment was preceded by 
discussion in the media and society as a whole. "About three years ago, 
there were debates in Tajikistan about whether Tajik society was ready for 
the death penalty moratorium or not," Riccardo Lepri, a human rights 
adviser with the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) 
based in the Tajik capital Dushanbe, said.

That discussion followed an international conference organised by the OSCE 
in December 2001 in Dushanbe. After the conference, participants submitted 
a number of recommendations to the Tajik authorities on the liberalisation 
of criminal law.

According to Lepri, the law that brought in the moratorium did not 
stipulate the period of suspension. "The moratorium is termless; it does 
not specify how long the suspension of the death penalty will continue."

Representatives of some Tajik NGOs are concerned about this in the wake of 
growing terrorist attacks in the region. "We have concerns that the 
moratorium could be cancelled at any moment," Nigina Bakhrieva, head of the 
National Human Rights and Law Observance Bureau, said. "After a series of 
terrorist acts in Russia, people there started considering whether it was 
time to cancel the death penalty moratorium here in Tajikistan."

Some argue that the death penalty is preferable to a lifetime spent in a 
Tajik jail - where conditions are often very poor. "Rumours say that 
prisoners simply die of hunger and diseases in our inhumane jails," Abdullo 
Latipov, a 56-year-old inhabitant of Dushanbe, says.

Many prisoners are known to have died from malnutrition and disease while 
serving sentences in the nation's jails. "Some of the lucky ones who are 
brought food by their well-to-do relatives at least once a week are able to 
survive somehow. As for the others, they simply die like flies," one former 
convict, recently released after a five-year sentence for theft, told IRIN.

IRIN asked Deputy Justice Minister Rakhmonov under what conditions 
prisoners are kept and whether prison constituted a humane alternative to 
the death penalty. "The prisons and corrective facilities of Tajikistan are 
indeed overcrowded. At current capacity, they are able to admit 6,000 
prisoners. However, at present, more than 9,000 prisoners are serving their 
terms in corrective facilities. Those sentenced to the death penalty, who 
are under the moratorium, are serving their 25 years of imprisonment in 
Kurgan Tyube prison."

The minister also admitted that prisons were breeding grounds for disease. 
"Last year prisoners underwent medical examinations with the support of 
international organisations," Rakhmonov said. "The examinations revealed 
more than 1,500 prisoners infected with tuberculosis, including 750 
convicts with the open form of the disease."

(source: IRIN / Reuters Alert Net)

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