June 26



KENYA:

Kenyans to give views on death penalty from Monday


A debate seeking public views on the administration of capital punishment and management of capital offences will kick off on Monday in Kisii County.

The power of mercy and advisory committee and national crime research centre will be conducting the discussions in other 5 counties, in Nyanza region, within the next 2 weeks.

PMAC secretary general Michael Kagika said his committee and the NCRC will visit Kisii, Nyamira, Siaya, Migori, Homabay and Kisumu counties to seek views from representatives of churches, youth, women, local leaders and other members of the public on the subject of capital offences and capital punishment.

"The objective of the debate is to provide an open dialogue on what Kenyans want in regard to the handling of capital offenders and the management of capital offences," he said.

Kagika in a statement said on Sunday that the debate that comes after the conclusion of the 6th World Congress against the death penalty in Oslo, Norway provides a platform for Kenyans to express their opinions on capital offences and what form of punishment capital offenders should be subjected to.

He said Kenya had noted recommendations made to move towards abolition of the death penalty in the past Universal Periodic Reviews at the United Nations Human Rights Council.

He said the country had decided to continue debating the management of capital offences and administration of the death penalty before making a stance on the subject of abolition, retention or otherwise.

Kenya seeks to collect public views which will later be used to prepare a cabinet paper to inform our final decision.

Capital punishment was formally introduced into the Kenyan legal system by the British during the colonial era.

After independence in 1963, the country retained and continued to apply the capital penalty.

Kenya has 118 penal institutions with a holding capacity of 26,000 inmates. But, currently the average prisoners' population stands at 52,517 of who 32,300 are convicted inmates and 20,217 remands.

The average female prisoner population is 3,617 with about 400 children accompanying their mothers in prisons.

At present, there are 2,664 prisoners who have been handed the death sentence, 87 being female.

(source: The Star)






SYRIA:

ISIS executes 5 media activists in Syria


The Islamic State murdered 5 Syrian media activists as it continues its assault on the press, maintaining tight control of the message that comes out of regions under the terrorist group's control.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights has viewed a video released by ISIS in Deir Ezzor, in eastern Syria. The video shows the execution of five media activists via 5 different, sadistic methods.

The militants also issued a warning that any journalists or media activists opposed to the group and working to reveal their crimes are not safe, even outside of Syria. They cite the killing of Mohammed Zaher al-Shirqat.

Shirqat worked for Halab Today TV, an independent satellite channel from Aleppo. He was shot in the neck at close range on the street in the Turkish city of Gaziantep in early April. He had previously received death threats from ISIS, who claimed responsibility for his murder.

The United States condemned the killing. "Freedom of the press, including ensuring that journalists can safely report on the crisis in Syria, remains critical as reporters keep working to expose the truth about this brutal conflict and Daesh's atrocities," reads a statement issued by John Kirby, Assistant Secretary and Department Spokesperson for the US state department. "[W]e stand ready to support Turkey as it works to bring to justice those responsible for attacks on the media."

The 5 media activists killed in Deir Ezzor were executed on charges of "acting against the Islamic State, communicating with outside parties and receiving funds, and other charges," reported the Observatory on Sunday.

The Islamic State has murdered at least 3 other journalists in Turkey. The media advocacy group Reporters Sans Fronti???res (Reporters Without Borders) has urged Turkey to "take whatever measures are necessary to guarantee the security of Syrian exile journalists."

(source: rudaw.net)

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