Forwarding, FYI.

-- CJR

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Date: Thu, 09 Oct 97 00:27:47
From: Dave Cull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: (en) US death row inspected by UN -- Guardian Weekly

International News / US death row inspected  /  Ed Vulliamy in Washington

US death row inspected

Ed Vulliamy in Washington

THE United States is being put under the kind of scrutiny by the United Nations
that it 
usually urges for other countries as an international team investigating its use
of the death 
penalty toured the South last week.
The UN inquiry is being led by Bacre Ndiaye, a leading human rights investigator
from 
Senegal. He is the second such UN monitor of the US. The first was on racism in
1992. Like 
his predecessor, Mr Ndiaye was initially welcomed by the administration, which
approved his 
tour last year, and he was expecting to meet senior politicians.
Requests were made to meet President Clinton and Vice-President Al Gore. Mr
Ndiaye says 
he was especially eager to meet the attorney-general, Janet Reno, and
representatives of 
the supreme court.But these have been refused. During the first few days of his
tour, 
visiting prisons and trying to talk to politicians, Mr Ndiaye had to be content
with junior 
officials, two congressmen, and no senators.
Officials at the UN were anxious to point out, however, that Mr Ndiaye was
touring 
Washington during the penultimate week of the congressional term, and that
politicians were 
"very, very busy".
Mr Ndiaye was appointed under the auspices of the UN Commission on Human Rights, 
which urges member states to enforce an international convention curbing the
expansion of 
"summary or arbitrary executions". He said the US was second, after China, in
expanding 
the death penalty.
The Guardian Weekly Volume  Issue  for week ending , Page 6



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