Sept. 30 COUNCIL OF EUROPE: The abolition of the death penalty is unfinished business ---- CoE declares European day against death penalty One day, in the not-too-distant future, the death penalty will be eradicated throughout the world. It may take time, but it will happen. It is an inevitable consequence of the slow but steady evolution towards ever higher standards of civilisation. 2 centuries ago, the entire civilised world abolished slavery because it accepted that slavery was inhuman and wrong. Hopefully, sooner rather than later, the death penalty will meet the same fate. In Europe, only Belarus continues to execute people. In 47 other European countries, all of them being members of the Council of Europe, which Belarus is not, they have signed Protocol 6 to our European Convention on Human Rights which outlaws this uncivilised and inhumane form of punishment in peace time. The tide is also turning in other parts of the world. More and more countries in all continents are either abolishing the death penalty or critically reviewing its application. Experts, public opinion and the political establishment are increasingly accepting that the death penalty is barbaric, that it does not deter crime, that it does not help the victims of crime, and that it transforms murderers into martyrs and judicial errors into irreversible tragedies. Europe can play a role in reinforcing the global trend towards abolition. Some of our closest friends and allies continue to execute people. We all know that the decision to abolish the death penalty must come from them. But until they decide to do so and eventually, they will - we should not remain silent. Politely but persistently, we should encourage them to follow our example and say yes to justice and no to cruelty, torture and death. But even in Europe, the abolition of death penalty is still unfinished business. First, many Europeans are still in favour of the death penalty. This is not something we can ignore. We need to go out and explain to people why the death penalty is wrong, why it has been abolished, and why it should stay abolished. Second, abolishing the death penalty must be accompanied by the introduction of adequate alternative sanctions where these do not yet exist which provide for the highest possible protection of the public and take into account the rights of the victims of crimes without compromising the fundamental principles of efficiency, proportionality and humanity of penal sanctions. Third, in many countries which have abolished death penalty as a result of their accession to the Council of Europe prisons are often in poor condition and fail to meet minimum standards in terms of space, security, health and living conditions. This is a problem for all prison populations, but especially for those serving long-term prison sentences. The Council of Europe Committee for the Prevention of Torture is regularly visiting places of detention in all European countries except non-member Belarus, and the recommendations and standards it has developed have helped to improve the situation to some extent, but not enough. Often, the problems are the shortage of money and the fact that investment in prisons is not popular so that it is not high on the political agenda. Finally, we need to encourage all European countries which have not yet done so to sign and ratify Protocol 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights, which bans the death penalty in all circumstances. This will consolidate the legal prohibition of capital punishment in Europe and send an important signal to other parts of the world. (source: New Europe----Terry Davis is the Secretary General of the Council of Europe) EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT: MEPs overstep Poland in campaign against death penalty A clear majority of European lawmakers last week overrode Polands opposition to their campaign against the death penalty. Members of the European Parliament supported a Councilbacked resolution calling for an immediate moratorium on the death penalty to be presented at the current 62nd session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York and overwhelmingly voted in favour, 504-45, to establish a European Day against the Death Penalty. Europe has always been the forerunner in campaigning against executions. The "EU is on the frontline amongst abolitionists throughout the world," Secretary of State for European Affairs Manuel Lobo Antunes said. He was in Strasbourg representing the Council Presidency of Portugal the 1st EU country to abolish the death penalty. With or without Poland, the campaign will go on. Lisbon will host a high-level conference on the issue on October 9. The European Council is due to table the resolution to the UNGA early to mid-October. The death penalty "replaces justice with vengeance," Italian MEP Luisa Morgantini said in the Plenary debate in Strasbourg on September 25. German MEP Martin Schulz called it the lowest point of human morale" and the opposite of human dignity." Europe has met with internal opposition though. In September, Poland single- handedly blocked the 26 member states from establishing the European Day on October 10. The Council said a unanimous vote was needed for such a move. Joining the EU as part of the Big Bang in 2004, Poland abolished the death penalty in the late 1980s as a requirement to move forward with EU accession talks. However, the rightwing government led by the Kaczynski twins has slowly adopted a harsher stance, even though Poles remain evenly split on the issue. The political climate in Poland is intense as support is waning for the brothers nationalist Law and Justice party ahead of October 21 snap elections in which they are slated against arch-rival opposition liberal Civic Platform in a neck-toneck race. Polish MEP Konrad Szymanski supported his national government, representing the sole opposition in the debate. He stressed that politics also touch on other categories in the question of life and death such as euthanasia and abortion. The Polish ruling government argues that a European Day should also condemn questions such as these. It is "saddening to know that the Europe we have always defended has come to include such views," Morgantini said. "We need to isolate voices who still argue against" the abolition of the death penalty. Polish MEP Jozef Pinior compared Szymanskis speech with that of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejads in New York. As far as Im concerned, your government has left my country, and gone towards the positions of Iran and Belarus." Belarus is the only country left in Europe allowing executions. Schulz went so far as to call on the EU to isolate Poland - sparking controversy within his own Socialist party. "The European Parliament must ensure that the political climate in Europe stays hostile towards any efforts to reintroduce the death penalty," he said. A member of Polands national parliament responded with nationalist rhetoric in a plea for Socialist Polish MEPs to sack Schulz, according to press reports. After the showdown in the Plenary, Szymanski told New Europe that the EU's campaigning efforts to establish a European Day is "hypocrisy." It was hypocritical, he said, to talk about such an issue when "we are completely silenced on abortion on demand," for example. "We are not talking about anything very serious I personally think that we have too many special days in the European countries for everything." "The European Commission involved in such social campaigning is not very serious," he said. Asked why Poland blocked a clear majority decision in the Council, he responded: "That was the toll". Just last year, Polish President Lech Kaczynski said the climate in Europe would change. "Countries who give up this penalty award an unimaginable advantage to the criminal over his victim, the advantage of life over death, he was quoted as saying. The climate in Europe remains the same - staunch opposition to the death penalty. MEPs pointed out that there is no proof that executions deter crime. Following failure by the European Union to submit a resolution to the UNGA in 1994 and 1999, the Italians started a third initiative. The death sentence "is an extreme act that goes against the most basic principles of civil coexistence that has been kept alive through the ages thanks to the logic of violence against violence in an endless chain," Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi wrote in La Repubblica last week. He took the campaign to New York, urging the UNGA to support an eventual abolition of the death penalty. The death penalty is banned under the European Unions Charter of Fundamental Rights. Protocol 6, adopted by the Council of Europe in 1982, only allows executions in times of war, while Protocol 13 adopted in 2002, bans it under any circumstance. France, Italy, Latvia, Poland and Spain still have yet to ratify No. 13. The global trend is toward a complete abolition, with Rwanda being the latest country joining in the appeal. Recent Amnesty International figures show that 90 countries or territories have abolished the death penalty for all crimes and 11 have abolished it for all but exceptional crimes, such as during war, while 30 are abolitionists in practice. 66 countries still retain the form of punishment - such as China, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, Sudan and the US. Amnesty International is supporting the resolution for at the UNGA as a first step toward a global abolition. Europeans made considerable progress last week, but they still have a long road ahead in convincing dominant world players such as the US in supporting their campaign, death penalty opponents said. "I also think that we should continue to urge our American colleagues to abolish the death penalty once and for all," Finnish MEP Piia-Noora Kauppi said. She called it "cruel and inhuman punishment - counter to the values of a person's right to life set out in the 1948 UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights. More US states are starting to question the legality of the death penalty: marches are taking place in California - a state with more than 600 people on death row; New York declared it unconstitutional in 2004. However, executions are still legal in 37 states, with almost 1,100 being carried out since 1976, data from the Washington DC-based Death Penalty Information Center showed. (source: New Europe)
[Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide
Rick Halperin Sun, 30 Sep 2007 17:31:51 -0500 (Central Daylight Time)
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide Rick Halperin
