May 3



IRAN----execution

Prisoner Hanged on Murder Charges


On Sunday April 30, a prisoner was reportedly executed at Hamadan Central Prison on murder charges, and another prisoner was returned to his cell after his execution was temporarily halted.

Close sources have identified the prisoner who was executed as Imran Askardasht, 30 years of age. "He was charged with murder in 2010," a close source tells Iran Human Rights.

On the same day, a prisoner in Hamadan Central Prison, who is on death row on murder charges, had his execution sentence temporarily halted upon receiving consent from the plaintiffs on his case file. Close sources have identified this prisoner as Bakhtiar Leilinejad, 31 years of age.

Imran and Bakhtiar were both transferred to solitary confinement on Saturday April 29 in preparation for their executions.

(source: iranhr.net)






BANGLADESH:

Kishoreganj court sentences 4 to death for murdering 10-year-old boy


A Kishoreganj court has awarded the death penalty to 4 persons for the abduction and murder of a 10-year-old boy.

On Aug 12, 2014, Sakibul Hasan Tutul was kidnapped from a village in the district's Pakundia Upazila.

The abductors called the father Kamal Uddin on his phone and demanded Tk 1 million in ransom. 2 days later, Tutul's body was found near his home, according to court documents.

On Wednesday, Kishoreganj's Women and Children Repression Prevention Tribunal delivered the verdict with the convicts on the dock.

Those received the death sentence are 'Dulal', 'Shohag', 'Aminul' and 'Dalim'.

Prosecutor AM Afzal said Tutul's father started the murder case accusing the 4.

(source: bdnews24.com)






EGYPT----execution

Egyptian authorities execute man convicted of raping and murdering 5-year-old girl in Minya governorate


Egyptian prison authorities executed Wednesday a 22-year-old man convicted of raping and murdering a 5-year-old girl in Upper Egypt's Minya governorate in March 2014.

Investigations in the case revealed that the convict kidnapped the girl, before taking her to an abandoned building in Maghaha village and raping her. He choked her with a cloth and repeatedly hit her in the head.

The convict's death verdict was upheld by the Court of Cassation in February 2016.

The Minya governorate prisons department also executed Wednesday 5 people convicted of murder in Qena and Gharbeya governorates under tight security measures.

On Tuesday, an Egyptian criminal court referred to the Grand Mufti a death sentence issued against a man convicted of raping a 20-month-old child in the Nile Delta governorate of Daqahliya last month in a case known publicly known as "the diaper girl's case."

The court is expected to confirm the sentence on 2 June after the Grand Mufti gives his opinion, which is not legally binding, on the validity of the death sentence according to Islamic law.

The most famous case of the rape and murder of a child happened in the coastal governorate of Port-Said in 2013, when 2 minors kidnapped, raped and killed 5-year-old girl Zeina Arafa, provoking rage and public outcry across the country.

The convicts in this case were sentenced by a criminal court to 20 years in prison. The court apologised to the public for not imposing capital punishment, as Egyptian law forbids issuing the death penalty to people younger than 18 years old.

(source: ahram.org.eg)

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

Rapist of 2-Year-Old Girl Handed Death Penalty


An Egyptian Criminal Court gave a 35-year-old man, who had raped a baby girl in March, a death sentence, referring the case to Dar al-Iftaa.

The final verdict is to be issued on June 2.

Being the survivor's neighbour, the rapist narrated how he took her as she was playing in front of her house in Dakahlia governorate into an uninhabited room, removed her diaper before he raped her, and ran away when he found her bleeding. The year and 8 months old girl was transferred to a hospital to get a reconstructive surgery due to major damages in her vagina.

"My daughter can't utter the words mama and papa yet and all of this has happened to her. My heart is burning and there's nothing I can do for her," the mother of the raped child said, according to Egypt Independent.

The deputy of Egypt's al-Azhar, the largest Muslim beacon had called for anyone found guilty of molesting child to receive the death penalty, he told state-owned newspaper Al-Ahram.

In Egypt, all capital punishment sentences are referred to Dar al-Iftaa, a religious body giving rulings to the masses and consultation for the judiciary.

(source: egyptianstreets.com)






SOMALIA:

Somali boys executed killed for alleged terrorism


Somalia is under criticism following the execution of some children suspected to be members of the Al-Shabaab terror group.

5 boys, aged between 14 and 17, have been sentenced to death in the northeastern Puntland region for their alleged role in the killing of 3 senior administration officials in February.

A military tribunal meted the sentences.

There are plans to execute 2 more boys Muhamed Yasin Abdi (aged 17) and Daud Saied Sahal (15) also for their alleged membership of the Al-Shabaab and the killing of government officials.

Rights group, Amnesty International, said the boys were executed following a fundamentally flawed process during which they were tortured to confess, denied access to a lawyer and additional protections accorded to juveniles, and tried in a military tribunal.

"The lives of the remaining 2 boys must be spared," said Michelle Kagari, Amnesty International's deputy regional director.

Kagari said authorities should halt the executions and retry the boys in fair proceedings in a juvenile civilian court without recourse to the death penalty.

"The Puntland authorities must not allow more blood on their hands."

Amnesty nonetheless demanded those responsible for killing the 3 administration officials be identified and be brought to justice.

"Torturing juveniles to confess, subjecting them to an unfair trial and then executing them does not ensure this."

According to family members, the boys, who they denied were members of the Al-Shabaab, were subjected to electric shock, burnt with cigarettes on their genitals, beaten and raped into confessing to the murders.

(source: cajnewsafrica.com)





PAKISTAN----executions

4 hardcore Taliban terrorists executed


4 hardcore Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) terrorists were sent to the gallows on Wednesday morning.

According to Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), the terrorists named Barkat Ali, Muhammad Adil, Ishaq and Latif-ur-Rehman were involved in committing heinous offences relating to terrorism, including killing of innocent civilians, attacking Armed Forces of Pakistan and Law Enforcement Agencies.

Barkat Ali an active member of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan. He was involved in killing of a civilian and was possessing fire-arms and explosives.

Muhammad Adil was also an active member of TTP and he was involved in kidnapping and slaughtering soldiers of Frontier Constabulary (FC) and destruction of a police station.

Ishaq was affiliated with Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan as well. He was involved in attacking armed forces of Pakistan and law enforcement agencies which resulted in death of a junior commissioned officer and injuries to a police constable.

Latif Ur Rehman was a member of TTP and was involved in kidnapping and killing security personnel and attacks on armed forces of Pakistan which resulted in death of many soldiers.

All 4 terrorists were found guilty in possessing arms and explosives. They confessed their crimes in front of a magistrate and were awarded death penalty.

(source: samaa.tv)

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

Death penalty for 3 in suicide attack case upheld


A Lahore High Court division bench on Tuesday upheld death penalty handed down to 3 men for their role in Police Emergency Rescue Service-15 building suicide attack.

The bench comprising Justice Sadaqat Ali Khan and Justice Shehram Sarwar dismissed appeals against the sentence filed by convicts Abid Akram, Sarfraz and Shabbir.

Counsel for the convicts argued that his clients were already in custody of law enforcement agencies when the suicide attack took place in 2009.

He said the FIR of the incident was lodged against unidentified suspects while the convicts were later implicated in the case.

The counsel argued that though prosecution failed to produce any direct or independent evidence against the convicts, the trial court awarded death sentence to them.

He asked the bench to set aside the conviction and acquit the convicts.

Opposing the appeals, a deputy public prosecutor argued that the convicts were the facilitators of the attack. He said Shahdara police had arrested the convicts on Dec 3, 2010 and during the interrogation they (convicts) confessed to their involvement in the Rescue-15 suicide attack.

The prosecutor further stated that police had also recovered weapons from the convicts' possession. He said the trial court had handed down the death penalty to the convicts in the light of convincing evidence produced by the prosecution.

After hearing both sides, the bench dismissed the appeals and upheld the conviction of the appellants.

An anti-terrorism court had on Jan 30, 2015 handed down death penalty to each convict on 23 counts. At least 26 people, including security personnel, had lost their lives in the attack while over 300 were injured.

(source: Dawn)

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

Christian Mother Asia Bibi's Death Sentence Appeal Delayed Again by Pakistan Supreme Court


Asia Bibi, the Christian mother imprisoned on death row in Pakistan, will have her appeal hearing delayed yet again after the nation's Supreme Court rejected a request for her case to be heard in early June.

Saiful Malook, Bibi's attorney, told the Pakistani news outlet The Express Tribune that Chief Justice Mian Saqib Nisar declined his client's request for an early hearing. As previously reported, Nisar, a Muslim lawyer, had submitted the request in mid-April for Bibi's case to be heard in the 1st week of June.

"I have been informed that the plea was declined by the CJP," Malook told the Tribune.

Bibi, who is also known as Aasiya Noreen and could become the 1st woman in Pakistan to be executed over a blasphemy allegation, has spent nearly 8 years in prison after local Muslim women accused her of insulting the Muslim prophet Muhammad. The women got angry because she drank from the same water bowl as them.

As blasphemy, in some instances, in Pakistan is punishable by death or life in prison, Bibi was sentenced to death in November 2010 even though she maintained her innocence.

"This is very unfortunate. Her husband became quiet when he heard the latest developments. We shall again apply for the hearing and keep struggling for justice," Joseph Nadeem, executive director of the Renaissance Education Foundation, told the Asia-based Catholic news outlet ucanews.com. "There are many factors at work behind the slow pace of judiciary. Her case has been in the doldrums due to huge pressure. There will be a strong reaction if Bibi is freed, opposing groups have made it a matter of honor and ego."

Initially, Bibi appealed her death sentence to the Lahore High Court but her hearing was delayed at least 7 times before her appeal was heard in October 2014 and her sentencing was upheld.

Last summer, there was optimism that Bibi might finally have her appeal heard by the Pakistan Supreme Court. It was reported that Nisar had ordered Bibi's appeal to be heard in the second week of October 2016.

However, the hearing was postponed. According to the American Center for Law and Justice, the hearing was delayed after Justice Iqbal Hameed-ur-Rehman was recused from the case because he was the chief justice on the Islamabad High Court when that court upheld the conviction of the Muslim bodyguard who assassinated Punjab Gov. Salmaan Taseer in 2011. Gov Taseer had spoken out in defense of Bibi and against the nation's blasphemy laws.

Since Pakistan instituted blasphemy laws in the 1980s, the laws have been used by Muslims to settle personal scores and target Christians and other religious minorities. Bibi is not the only Christian to have been victimized by the blasphemy laws.

Last October, it was reported that a 9-year-old Christian boy was accused of burning the Quran. The boy and his mother were later arrested and claimed they were beaten and tortured by police.

"Such atrocities have become routine. The plight of Bibi has had a dampening effect on minorities. Their grief cannot be addressed because of religious retrogressive and extremist groups. Islamists consider her freedom a defeat for their movement," Christian lawyer Naeem Shakir told ucanews.com.

Pakistan currently ranks as the 4th worst country in the world when it comes to the persecution of Christians, according to Open Doors USA's 2017 World Watch List.

(source: christianpost.com)






PHILIPPINES:

Purge of 'anti-death' solons to continue


The leadership of the House of Representatives will continue the revamp of its members who voted against the death penalty bill last March, Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez said on Tuesday.

"The revamp will proceed," Alvarez said when asked if his leadership will still declare vacant the positions of other majority allies who failed to support the administration measure.

The Speaker implemented the overhaul immediately after the House voted on House Bill 4727, the proposal seeking to reimpose the death penalty on drug-related cases. The ruling coalition declared seats vacant for specific positions and committee chairmanships.

Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, the former president, and other anti-death penalty lawmakers was removed from their posts. Arroyo was House deputy speaker for Central Luzon.

But Alvarez said his leadership would respect the constitutional provision where a party has the right to nominate a representative to the Commission on Appointments, after Occidental Mindoro Rep. Josephine Sato - a member of the 12-man House contingent to the powerful CA - of the Liberal Party voted against death penalty.

Meanwhile, the death penalty bill is not likely to be enacted during the first regular session of the 17th Congress that will end in June.

This came after Ilocos Norte Rep. Rodolfo Farinas, the House Majority Floor Leader, identified 14 measures to be approved by both the Senate and the House of Representatives before its sine die adjournment next month.

"These bills will be approved by both chambers until May 31. This is a joint agreement between the House and the Senate," Farinas told reporters.

The death penalty bill that was approved by the House of Representatives last March was not included in the list.

While the House managed to approved the death penalty bill, contained in House Bill 4727 and principally authored by Speaker Alvarez, the Senate was cold to the proposal and did not include the bill in its priority agenda.

Besides Rep. Arroyo, removed from their positions last March were Sorsogon Rep. Evelina Escudero, chairman of the House committee on basic education; Batangas Rep. Vilma Santos Recto, chairman of the House committee on civil service and professional regulation; Dinagat Islands Rep. Kaka Bag-Ao, chairman of the House committee on people participation; Gabriela party-list Rep. Emmi de Jesus, chairman of the House committee on poverty alleviation; ACT party-list Rep. Antonio Tinio, chairman of the House committee on public information; Anak Mindanao party-list Rep. Sitti Hataman, on Muslim Affairs; Buhay Hayaang Yumabong party-list Rep. Mariano Michael Velarde, on overseas workers affairs.

Bayan Muna party-list Rep. Carlos Zarate, on natural resources; Batanes Rep. Henedina Abad, on government reorganization; Democratic Independent Workers' Association party-list Rep. Emmeline Aglipay-Villar, on women and gender equality; and Quezon City Rep. Christopher Belmonte, on special committee on land use.

Congress resumed its session yesterday and will adjourn sine die on June 2.

(source: thestandard.com.ph)






INDIA:

Death penalty demanded


Strongly condemning the gang rape of 2 minor girls by seven youths on April 14 night and demanding death penalty for the 7 rapists, a large number of school students took out a rally at Heirok, Thoubal district today.

The rally was organised by Social Youth Progressive Organisation and Youth Forum for Protection of Human Rights.

The student protestors held placards,"Punish the rapists", "Justice delayed is justice denied", "Stop ill-treating women", "Respect women" etc in the rally which started from Heirok Part II welcome shed and passed through Heirok Part I and III .

(source: The Sangai Express)

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

Supreme Court upholds death penalty for 55-year-old who raped, killed 4-year-old


The Supreme Court on Wednesday dismissed a review petition of a 55-year-old man and sent him to gallows for raping and stoning to death a 4-year-old girl in 2008.

A bench headed by Justice Dipak Misra said "no case is made out" and dismissed the review petition.

The bench, which also comprised Justices RF Nariman and UU Lalit, said "the aggravating circumstances and the barbaric manner in which the 4-year-old was killed, clearly outweigh the mitigating circumstances."

The convict is currently lodged in Nagpur jail.

The court had on November 26, 2014 upheld the trial court as well as Bombay High Court judgements awarding death sentence to Maharashtra resident Vasanta Sampat Dupare in the 2008 rape-cum-murder case of Nagpur.

The apex court had on July 14 last year agreed to examine the plea of Dupare, who had claimed he was not accorded a fair chance to put forth his arguments by the trial court which sentenced him to death.

While upholding death penalty awarded to the convict, the top court had said that the rape of a minor girl child is nothing but "a monstrous burial of her dignity in darkness."

The court had referred to the sequence of events in the case and said that the convict, who was a neighbour, lured the girl, raped her and then battered her to death using 2 heavy stones.

(source: Hindustan Times)






ENGLAND:

Monmouth woman completes 178-mile challenge to help those on death row


A Monmouth woman has completed a 178-mile cycle ride to assist individuals facing the death penalty in the United States.

Lucie Boase, 27, who grew up in Monmouth and now works in Bristol as a paralegal, set off on 2nd May to New Orleans, Louisiana, to take up a 3-month voluntary position providing legal assistance for prisoners who could otherwise not afford it.

The trip comes after she completed Hadrian's Cycleway, a National Cycle Network route which follows the course of Hadrian's Wall from Ravenglass on the west coast to South Shields on the east coast in just 4 days, averaging 45 miles a day. She has so far raised nearly 900 pounds of her 1,000 pounds target.

"I've always loved cycling but I've never done anything as arduous as this before - at the moment I just do my daily four-mile commute", says Lucie.

"I wanted to raise some awareness about what I was going out to New Orleans to do and thought that this represented a fitting challenge, both in terms of my own ability but also because of the symbolism of walls themselves, creating barriers and division.

"I'm excited by the prospect of using my skills as a lawyer to provide representation to individuals who face the death penalty in Louisiana - in a small way, helping to break down some of the walls which confine us."

Amicus, the UK-based charity which arranges work placements for law graduates in the United States, was founded in 1992 in memory of Andrew Lee Jones who was executed by the state of Louisiana, dubbed the 'world's prison capital'. An internship with the charity was an unequivocal choice for Lucie:

"I oppose the death penalty and believe it plays no part in a progressive society. It's been proven that it is disproportionately imposed on the most vulnerable in society, violating their right to due process and the concept of equal justice before the law.

"The significant problem in the US is that there is no minimum level of experience required to defend a capital trial, leading to inexperienced lawyers and poor representation.

"The quality of legal representation in a capital trial can therefore mean the difference between life and death.

"Amicus, a tiny organisation with limited funds, works not through campaigning but through active involvement in frontline work, sending legally-qualified interns like me to support lawyers working in the US."

Lucie will spend her time in New Orleans supporting public defenders: lawyers appointed by the state to represent people who are accused of criminal acts and can't afford a lawyer to represent them.

Although it is now illegal to impose the death penalty upon people who are under 18 at the time of their crime, courts still exercise a wide discretion in sentencing children to life-long prison sentences, denying them the option of ever being released or being rehabilitated back into society.

Lucie hopes to have a hands-on experience helping with all aspects, from gathering evidence and building an effective defence, to attending court and visiting prisoners.

"It's an extremely exciting - albeit daunting - opportunity and I can't wait to start," she adds. "Although the US has a very different legal system facing very different issues to those which we deal with here in the UK,

"I am confident that my experience with Amicus will prove instructive for my practice back home, and inform my ongoing work as a lawyer, ensuring access to justice for all."

Amicus internships are unpaid and Lucie must bear all of the costs of the trip herself.

To donate to help with Lucie's trip, or to follow her progress in New Orleans, visit her JustGiving page www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/lucie-boase-amicus

(source: chepstowbeacon.co.uk)




KENYA:

Should all convicts of capital offences get death penalty?


The spectre of unconstitutionality surrounding the handling of capital offenders has widened to whether all convicts deserve the same penalty: death.

There are 5 crimes classified as capital offences in Penal Code: murder, treason, oathing for criminal activities by proscribed criminal outfits, robbery and attempted robbery with violence.

The law prescribes death as the only sentence for convicts of such offences.

And the debate on the controversial capital punishment and intrigues around it could open the floodgates of court suits, leading to a constitutional crisis if the majority support abolition of the penalty.

UNDESERVING CONVICTS?

Experts say sometimes, the mandatory death sentence serves extreme punishment to some undeserving convicts of the offences, and is therefore disproportionate and unconstitutional.

Views are that there should be variations in penalties meted out on convicts of capital offfences, depending on motivation for and degree of aggravation in committing such crimes.

Also in question is whether the law should consider the circumstances under which each offender commits the offences, and set a formula of determining varied proportionate penalties.

Justice Jessie Lesiit, the principal judge in the High Court's criminal division, says lack of distinction and clear definitions of the offences of robbery and robbery with violence have led to disproportionate sentencing of convicts.

Lesiit said the sections that define robbery, simple robbery and robbery with violence, and attempted robbery and attempted robbery with violence are ambiguous.

She said the limitations or the challenges the judicial officers face is not in the sentence to give but in lack of clarity and lack of differentiation between the manner in which the offence is committed and the kind of weapons used in the offences of robbery.

That failure to clarify, classify and distinguish between the actions, the weapons and what is done, even the execution of the offence, poses a problem, Lesiit said.

She said there are crimes that would be deserving of a serious punishment, even if it is death, because of the way in which they are executed and the kind of weapons used.

And there are others that are not deserving at all because of the way they were executed and the weapons the offenders carried.

"Those are the things we are saying, let us have a distinction in our law so we can say in this case, aggravation was lacking; they didn't do a good thing but they didn't come with a kind of force that would require a severe punishment. Each should be in category of their own," Lesiit said.

"But ours is the same river that carries all of them, which is a mistake. Because Kenyans said they want it [death sentence], let us have it for the most serious of offences, the most aggravated ones. The person who uses gun, knives and petrol bombs can get the death penalty."

CONSTITUTIONAL THRESHOLDS

A 3-judge bench chaired by Lesiit herself in September 2015 directed Parliament and the state law office to amend some sections of the penal code to meet constitutional thresholds.

12 death row convicts whose sentences were commuted to life were challenging many issues, including the mandatory death sentence - the fact that because the sentence is mandatory even if mitigation is given, it is of no use because the sentence is already pre-determined by the statute.

Lesiit said the bench found that there is no distinct clarity to differentiate between degrees of aggravation of the offence of robbery, the offence of robbery with violence and attempted robbery with violence with sufficient particularities.

She said the problem is not the sentence but that the laws have not differentiated the actions and the manner of executions of those offences, then they go on to provide all of them with 1 sentence.

There is no distinct clarity to differentiate between degrees of aggravation of the offence of robbery, the offence of robbery with violence and attempted robbery with violence with sufficient particularities.

"What we found is that the definition section 295 gives of robbery is inadequate and insufficient in its scope and also in application. The penalties sections that are provided do not set out the required details in precision that meet the constitutional threshold that requires certainty and clarity of the offence charged on the accused person to be able to defend themselves," Lesiit said.

"We said those sections are ambiguous and are conflicted to such an extent that they violate an accused person's right to a fair trial. Because under article 27 of the constitution, it requires that accused persons who are a special category of persons facing criminal trial should be accorded equal treatment, protection and equal benefits under the law."

Justice Lesiit said they asked Parliament to look at those sections to come up with clarification and distinction in aggravation, "so that if you are 2 of you and it is ngeta [using hands to subdue someone], that offence should have a name."

"If they can distinguish that and state here where you used firearms or grenades or you have gone with knives, you have stabbed people and all those things, then that one is an aggravated form of robbery. If it is where they have shot everybody and the sentence is death, it will be proportionate to what they have done," Lesiit said.

She said the offence should lead to an imprisonment of not more than 10 years, with the court having discretion to determine exactly how many years they will give, depending on the execution of the offence.

Lesiit said if somebody committed the offence while armed with a gun and another person was armed with a stick, the two ought not be treated the same.

INTENTION THAT COUNTS

But Shatikha Chivusia, a Kenya National Commission on Human Rights commissioner, differs with Lesiit on pegging the penalties on the types of weapons and degree of aggravation used.

Chivusia argues that for there to be culpability, there must be an intention and then the action - the 2 things that go hand in hand in the ingredients of crime, irrespective of what kind of weapon is used.

"If this person left his house with a gun, the other left his house with a knife and another with a stick, all of these items are able to cause bodily harm, which means as the person is preparing to go and commit that crime, in their mind the rationale is: should there be interference or should the victim resist, then I am going to use what I have," Chivusia said.

"For the common chicken thieves, the aim is to steal and go away, but the moment you are armed, you have an intention to cause harm should your plans be interfered with."

She said said after a convict is sent to the hangman, there is a window for appeal, which means that the due process is followed, and having listened to both sides and evidence before the court, it is on that basis that capital punishment is pronounced.

Lesiit says in the case where a gun is involved and is fired, that offence is more aggravated.

She says a fired gun and a stick cannot be compared, and there should be degrees of aggravation recognised under the law.

"We just have a definition of what a robbery is. It tells you if your intention is to rob someone of something. For instance, if you are with another person and maybe you are armed with something, which they don't specify to distinguish levels of aggravation - they say now that is robbery with violence," she said.

"If you stole something from somebody and you were 2 of you, it doesn't matter whether you used any actual violence or not. If you are 2 of you and you have stolen something from someone, that is robbery with violence."

Lesiit added: "It cannot be that somebody who is not armed and is with another one and they steal something, that that is the same level of robbery as the one who comes armed with a gun and they are a huge number of people and they are firing all over the place."

Attorney General GIthu Muigai supported the repealing of some sections of the Penal Code to remove generalities that anchor inherent unfairness.

He said the law should be amended to distinguish between a person who is the principal perpetrator of the crime and the person who is a victim of circumstances by being at the same place at the same time with the person who commits the crime.

"Our law must catch up with the most recent thinking globally, about crime and punishment," Muigai said.

"Right now if you are with a person who intends to rob somebody but you don't know his intention, then he uses violence, you are also an accomplice and you will be charged with capital robbery."

(source: the-star.co.ke)






NIGERIA:

EU, Switzerland urge Nigeria to abolish death sentences


The European Union (EU) Heads of Mission in Nigeria and the Ambassador of Switzerland on Tuesday condemned death penalty sentences in Nigeria.

This was contained in a joint statement released by EU Heads of Mission to Nigeria Michel Arrion and Swiss Ambassador to Nigeria Eric Mayooraz in Abuja, the Nation's capital.

The statement called on State Governors as well as the Nigerian Government to comprehensively respond to the issue through a more transparent approach.

The envoys singled out the proposed executions in Lagos State, describing it as 'cruel, degrading and inhuman punishment.'

As of 2017, Nigeria remains one of the only countries in the World where Capital punishment is legal.

The country has constantly faced backlash for failing to abolish the death penalty. In 2O16 alone Nigeria recorded over 527 death sentences.

Human Rights group, Amnesty International says the country handed down more death sentences that year than any other country except China.

In Nigeria, the Edo State Government executed 3 people in 2016, the 1st executions since 2013.

According to information provided by Nigeria's prisons service, a total of 1,979 people are currently under death sentence.

The Statement by the EU said that death penalty fails to provide deterrence to criminal behaviour and represents an unacceptable denial of human dignity and integrity.

?It maintains that death penalty is as barbaric as it is outlandish, adding that globally 104 countries have abolished death penalty for all crimes.

According to the Statement, Nigeria and Gambia are countries in ECOWAS still executing their citizens.

The statement also pledged the support of the EU and Switzerland in strengthening the Nigerian judicial system and improving the rights and safety of citizens.

"The EU and Switzerland are committed to contribute to the strengthening of the Nigerian judicial system and the promotion of rule of law and justice for Nigerian Citizens.

"We look forward to further supporting Nigerian authorities in adopting appropriate legislation to improve the rights and safety of its citizens, in accordance with our positions on death penalty," the statement read.

(source: tv360nigeria.com)






PALESTINE:

Death penalty of honour-killing uncles commuted


2 Palestinian brothers have been given a reprieve after being sentenced to death for murdering their niece in a so-called 'honour killing' by forcing her to swallow poison while pointing a gun to her head.

The Palestinian Criminal Court has commuted the death sentence with imprisonment of 10 and 7 years after the victim's parents gave up their rights in the case.

The 20-year-old victim - identified only as T.S. - fled home when her family discovered she had agreed to marry a man she had fallen in love with. She sought refuge at the house of a community leader in Nablus, who vowed to protect her.

The court heard that the victim's father and his brothers visited the community leader and asked him to hand over the woman. He initially refused but relented after the father and his brothers promised that no harm would come to her.

The father handed over his daughter to his brothers, who accompanied her to another house in Nablus, where they prepared a cup of juice for her. On the 1st sip, the woman became suspicious but one of her uncles pointed a gun to her head and threatened to shoot her unless she drank all the juice.

A senior court official told Gulf News that according to the confession of the 2 uncles, their niece took 2 hours to die after swallowing a large amount of the juice. The uncles told police that the woman had committed suicide after her father forbade her from marrying her sweetheart - a story backed up by the father and mother.

However, after an extensive investigation by the police and public prosecution, the uncles were arrested and confronted with the evidence. They confessed, saying they killed their niece for insisting on marrying the man she loved.

The Palestinian Criminal Court had sentenced the 2 murderers to death but reprieved them on Monday because of the decision of the victim's parents to give up their rights in the case.

(source: Gulf News)


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