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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: AI: Death Penalty News- Dec92
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.005147.12013@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: PACH
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 00:51:47 GMT
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-
- /** justice.usa: 420.0 **/
- ** Topic: AI: Death Penalty News- Dec92 **
- ** Written 9:30 pm Dec 24, 1992 by hnaylor in cdp:justice.usa **
- From: Hilary Naylor <hnaylor>
- Subject: AI: Death Penalty News- Dec92
-
- /* Written 9:28 pm Dec 24, 1992 by hnaylor@igc.apc.org in igc:ai.general */
- /* ---------- "DEATH PENALTY NEWS: DEC 1992" ---------- */
- DEATH PENALTY NEWS DECEMBER 1992 AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
-
- A SUMMARY OF EVENTS ON THE DEATH PENALTY AND MOVES TOWARDS WORLDWIDE
- ABOLITION
-
- PAKISTAN: NINETEEN EXECUTIONS SINCE APRIL 1992
-
- Nineteen prisoners have been executed in Pakistan during 1992, the first
- year since 1988 in which executions are reported to have been carried out.
-
- Southern Sind became the first Pakistani province to reintroduce executions
- when, in April 1992, two prisoners were hanged for murder (see Death
- Penalty News, June 1992). During November 1992 a further 17 executions have
- taken place in Punjab province.
-
- Eleven prisoners convicted of murder, including a 17-year old male, were
- hanged in various prisons in Punjab province on 15 November, the biggest
- mass execution ever in Pakistan according to local human rights workers.
- Six other convicted prisoners due to be executed were reportedly reprieved
- when relatives of the murder victims accepted compensation and, as
- permitted under Pakistan's Islamic law, granted a pardon.
-
- A further six prisoners were hanged for murder in the Punjab provincial
- capital Lahore on 25 November 1992. The execution of a seventh prisoner,
- who was also due to be hanged on 25 November, was reportedly deferred for
- legal reasons.
-
- There are reportedly around 130 people who were convicted of murder by
- special courts during the past year and a half and AI fears that they may
- soon be executed. AI believes that the procedures of the Special Courts for
- Speedy Trial, introduced in August 1991, and the Special Courts for the
- Suppression of Terrorist Activities do not conform to minimum standards for
- fair trial (see "Pakistan: Special Courts for Speedy Trial" (AI Index: ASA
- 33/23/91).
-
- AI URGES PERU NOT TO EXTEND THE DEATH PENALTY
-
- AI wrote in November 1992 to the President of Peru, Alberto Fujimori, to
- express deep concern over public statements he made the previous month
- concerning his government's intention to withdraw from obligations to abide
- by clauses on the death penalty enshrined in the American Convention on
- Human Rights. AI understood that such steps were to be taken in order that
- the Peruvian state may put into effect legislation which provides for the
- death penalty for acts of treason as defined in anti-terrorist Decree Law
- No. 25,659 [for tr: Decreto Ley No. 25,659].
-
- In December, during a visit to Peru, AI delegates held talks with
- Ambassador Jose Urrutia, a Ministry of Foreign Affairs [for tr: Ministerio
- de Relaciones Exteriores] representative. The Ambassador assured the
- delegates that the government had eventually decided that they were not
- going to withdraw from the Convention, but he went on to indicate that the
- government would still be looking for a way of legislating for the death
- penalty through reforms to the Constitution to be proposed by the newly
- elected Democratic Constituent Congress [for tr: Congreso Constituyente
- Democratico]. This Congress is expected to initiate its work in January
- 1993.
-
- Peru ratified the American Convention on Human Rights on 28 July 1978,
- including the clauses which state: "The death penalty will not be
- reestablished in states which have abolished it" (Article 4.3); "...Its
- application shall not be extended to crimes to which it does not presently
- apply" (Article 4.2); and "In no case shall capital punishment be inflicted
- for political offences or related common crimes" (Article 4.4).
-
- The last execution in Peru took place in January 1979. Under a new
- constitution which was approved that year, and which came into force in
- July 1980, the death penalty was abolished for peacetime offences. Article
- 235 states, "There is no death penalty except for treason in times of
- external war". However, on 5 April 1992 President Fujimori suspended the
- legislature and announced the setting up of an executive-led Government of
- Emergency and National Reconstruction [for tr: Gobierno de Emergencia y
- Reconstruccion Nacional]. The Government immediately decreed that those
- clauses of the Constitution which stood in the way of reforms to be
- undertaken by the new Government were suspended. The clauses suspended by
- the Government have never been specified.
-
- On 15 December 1989, Peru was one of the states which, by a majority vote
- at the UN General Assembly, favoured the adoption of a second optional
- protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights for
- the abolition of the death penalty. Peru is also a member of the
- Organization of American States which, in its General Assembly of 4-9 June
- 1990, decided to adopt without a vote the protocol to the American
- Convention on Human Rights relating to the abolition of the death penalty.
-
- LIBYA: RESUMPTION OF EXECUTIONS
-
- The first officially announced executions in Libya for over five years were
- carried out in November 1992. According to reports, Libyan television
- announced on 10 November 1992 that six men had been sentenced to death and
- executed that morning after having been convicted of criminal offences
- including rape and murder. The next day, pictures were shown on television
- of the six men prior to their execution.
-
- According to Libya's Code of Criminal Procedure (CCP), capital offences are
- tried by the criminal section of courts of appeal. The CCP provides for
- automatic review of death sentences by the Court of Cassation. All death
- sentences require ratification by the Secretariat of the General People's
- Congress, Libya's highest authority since 1977. Executions generally take
- place in prisons.
-
- In March 1988 Colonel Mu'ammar al-Gaddafi called for the abolition of the
- death penalty in Libya and its replacement with other punishments. The
- Great Green Document on Human Rights in the Era of the Masses, adopted in
- June 1988, stated that the death penalty would be applied "only to he whose
- life constitutes a danger or corruption to society", and set abolition as
- an aim of Libyan society. AI deeply regrets recent executions in Libya and
- has expressed its concern in a message to Colonel Gaddafi.
-
- BANGLADESH: EXTENSION OF DEATH PENALTY
-
- Three prisoners are reported to have been executed in Bangladesh during
- 1992. AI is alarmed that these executions may signal a resumption of the
- active use of the death penalty in Bangladesh, as in 1991 no executions
- were reported to have taken place, and only one execution was reported in
- 1990. According to official sources there are at present 114 prisoners on
- death row in Bangladesh; 66 of these prisoners were sentenced to death
- between the beginning of 1991 and September 1992.
-
- On 15 September 1992 President Biswas promulgated the Curbing of Terrorist
- Activities Ordinance 1992, which extends the death penalty to new offences.
- It lists nine offences under the heading of terrorism or anarchy and
- provides punishments from five years' imprisonment to the death penalty for
- any one of them, without relating specific offences to specific
- punishments. The offences listed include extorting money, obstructing and
- diverting traffic, damaging vehicles and property, snatching jewellery by
- force, and harassing and abducting women and children.
-
- The ordinance also provides for the setting up of special tribunals whose
- procedures will in significant ways fall short of international standards
- for fair trial. For example, trials can take place in absentia; and the
- rigid time frame prescribed for trials will make it difficult for
- defendants to present a full defence. Parliament passed a bill to replace
- the ordinance, which is based on its provisions, by a majority on 1
- November and it is now law for a two-year period.
-
-
- SWITZERLAND: TOTAL ABOLITION OF THE DEATH PENALTY COMES INTO FORCE
-
- An amendment to the Swiss Military Penal Code, abolishing the death penalty
- in time of war, came into force on 1 September 1992 (see Death Penalty News
- April 1992 for details of the amendment).
-
- ANGOLA: MOVES TOWARDS COMPLETE ABOLITION OF THE DEATH PENALTY
-
- Angola's parliament, the National Assemby, approved a constitutional
- amendment providing for abolition of the death penalty for all offences on
- 26 August 1992. The amendment passed by a narrow margin; 89 votes in favour
- and 83 against.
-
- It is believed that this amendment, as well as all other constitutional
- changes made during the August session will have to be approved by the new
- National Assembly, elected in late September 1992, before it comes into
- force. If the amendment does come into force, Angola will become the fifth
- African country to abolish the death penalty for all offences, the other
- countries being Cape Verde, Sao Tome and Principe, Namibia and Mozambique.
-
- INTERNATIONAL TREATIES
-
- GERMANY RATIFIES THE SECOND OPTIONAL PROTOCOL
-
- The Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) ratified the Second Optional Protocol
- to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights aiming at the
- abolition of the death penalty on 18 August 1992. Twelve countries have now
- ratified the protocol.
-
- THE CZECH AND SLOVAK REPUBLIC AND HUNGARY RATIFY THE SIXTH PROTOCOL
-
- On 18 March 1992 the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic ratified the
- European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
- Freedoms and its Sixth Protocol which provides for abolition of the death
- penalty for peacetime offences. Hungary ratified the convention and the
- protocol on 5 November, bringing to 19 the total number of countries which
- have ratified the protocol.
-
- THE DEATH PENALTY AND DRUGS
-
- GUATEMALA: Guatemala adopted a new law to combat drug offences on 23
- September 1992, which introduced the death penalty for drug traffickers
- responsible for the deaths of others, either through drug consumption or
- acts of violence. This contravenes the American Convention on Human Rights,
- which Guatemala ratified in 1978, which states that the application of the
- death penalty shall not be extended to crimes to which it did not apply at
- the time of ratification of the convention.
-
- UNITED ARAB EMIRATES: The Emirates News Agency reported on 29 September
- 1992 that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) was to introduce the death penalty
- for drug trafficking. On 27 October 1992 a Sharjah court sentenced three
- Pakistani nationals to death for smuggling drugs into the country. AI has
- appealed to the President to commute these death sentences.
-
- INDIA: An Indian government minister, Sitaram Kesri, proposed on 26
- September 1992 that first-time drug traffickers be given the death penalty.
- At present the death penalty can only be applied in India for a second drug
- trafficking conviction; according to Kesri the proposed change to the 1989
- law was sanctioned at a meeting of senior state officials held on 25
- September. He said the proposal would be discussed by the cabinet and
- presented to parliament for approval, although it would not be considered
- within the next five months.
-
- C Chakrabarty, director general of India's Narcoctic Control Bureau, said
- some officials had serious doubts about the proposal. Chakrabarty
- questioned the success of the death penalty as a deterrent: "If you look at
- the graph for murders in India, it is going up and up, regardless of the
- capital punishment prescribed by law".
-
- MALAYSIA: During 1992 at least 25 people in Malaysia were sentenced to
- death by the High Courts for drug trafficking. Since April 1983 the death
- penalty has been mandatory for drug-trafficking on conviction of possession
- of 15 grams of heroin or morphine, 200 grams of cannabis, or 1,000 grams of
- opium.
-
- When in July 1992 an opposition MP, Karpal Singh, asked the Deputy Home
- Minister in parliament how many individuals were on death row for drug
- offences, he was was provided with a figure of 274.
-
- AI issued several Urgent Actions during 1991 and 1992 on behalf of a group
- of prisoners in Malaysia who were sentenced to death in 1991 for drug
- offences; the prisoners were allegedly ill-treated soon after being
- arrested, and were thought to be disadvantaged in their trials due to
- language difficulties as they are Philippine and Pakistan nationals. In
- addition, two of this group were under 18 at the time of their alleged
- offence but have not been awarded juvenile status in accordance with
- internationally accepted standards.
-
- SAUDI ARABIA: Saudia Arabia has executed more than 40 people, of different
- nationalities, for drug smuggling in the past five years, a Saudi security
- official revealed at an anti-drug conference in October 1992. In 1987 the
- death penalty was extended to include those convicted of drug smuggling or
- receiving and distributing drugs from abroad.
-
- IRAN: Seventeen prisoners convicted of drug smuggling by Iranian
- revolutionary courts were executed in Tehran on 18 October 1992, according
- to a report released by the Jomhuri Eslami newspaper on 20 October.
-
- According to an AI report "IRAN: Executions of prisoners continue unabated"
- (AI Index: MDE 13/18/92), the number of executions carried out in Iran for
- criminal offences, especially for drug trafficking offences, increased
- sharply from January 1989 onwards. In 1989 AI recorded over 1500 executions
- announced for criminal offences, more than 1000 of them for drug-
- trafficking offences. In 1990 at least 750 prisoners were executed, 441 of
- them for drug-related offences. In 1991 AI recorded at least 775
- executions. The total figure in each year is expected to be considerably
- higher. According to Iranian press reports in 1991, the majority of death
- sentences were passed for drug-smuggling offences. AI is deeply concerned
- that the nationwide anti-drug campaign, launched in 1989, has led to
- increasingly arbitrary arrest and summary trial procedures rapidly followed
- by executions.
-
- PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA: According to the official New China News
- Agency, 885 drug traffickers were given death sentences or suspended death
- sentences in China during the first nine months of 1992. The agency also
- reported that 277 prisoners convicted of drug trafficking were executed in
- Yunnan province alone between January and June 1992.
-
- An AI report, "PRC: Drugs and the Death Penalty in 1991" (AI Index: ASA
- 17/07/92), examines the use of the death penalty for drugs offences in the
- context of a nationwide campaign in China, launched in June 1991, aimed at
- eliminating drug trafficking and drug use within two to three years. AI is
- concerned that anti-crime campaigns such as this may result in the
- application of the death penalty for offences which at other times would be
- dealt with more leniently. It is also concerned that the deadline fixed for
- the achievement of the goals of the anti-drug campaign is resulting in a
- dramatic weakening of legal and procedural safeguards against unfair trials
- in death penalty cases.
-
- SINGAPORE: Three prisoners, Tan Toon Hock, Lim Joo Yin and Tan Chong Ngee,
- were executed in Singapore in 1992 for drug trafficking. A further two
- prisoners convicted of drug trafficking were sentenced to death by the High
- Court on 5 December 1992.
-
- An amendment to the Misuse of Drugs Act in 1976 made the death penalty
- mandatory for possession of over 15 grams of heroin and 30 grams of
- morphine. The Act was later further amended to provide a mandatory death
- sentence for possession of 1.2 kg of opium, 30 grams of cocaine and 500
- grams of cannabis.
-
-
- FORMER USSR: DEATH PENALTY STATISTICS
-
- AZERBAYDZHAN: AI delegates who visited Azerbaydzhan in October 1992, were
- provided with recent statistics on the use of the death penalty by Chingiz
- Bashirov, Vice Chairman of the Azerbaydzhani Supreme Court. According to
- these the number of death sentences passed had fallen from 17 in 1986 to
- three in each of the years 1989 and 1990, but had risen to 18 in 1991. A
- further 18 death sentences had been passed in the first half of 1992. The
- Vice Chairman explained that this steep rise was in connection with an
- increase in the number of convictions for murder as a result of the
- conflict in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. All but two of the 76
- sentences passed since 1986 had been for premeditated, aggravated murder.
- The exceptions were one sentence passed in 1986 for "infringing the life of
- a police officer" (Article 191-1) and one passed in 1992 for "sabotage"
- (Article 61). Thirty-four people were executed between 1986 and 1990, all
- convicted of premeditated murder, but no executions had been carried out
- since then.
-
- According to unofficial sources 45 prisoners were being held on death row
- as of October 1992: seven ethnic Armenians, five ethnic Russians and 33
- Azerbaydzhanis. One ethnic Armenian awaiting execution, Yury Dzhangiryan,
- died in prison in June 1992.
-
- President Abulfaz Elchibey of the Azerbaydzhani Republic has issued a
- statement expressing his personal opposition, on priniciple, to the death
- penalty. This was reported in a radio broadcast on 30 September 1992.
- President Boris Yeltsin of the Russian Federation had recently sent
- President Elchibey an appeal on behalf of a Russian soldier, Lieutenant
- Yevgeny Lukin, who was sentenced to death on 31 August 1991 for murder.
- President Elchibey responded with the following statement: "I am against
- the death penalty in principle, and the issue of Lt. Lukin's fate is now
- being examined".
-
- BELARUS: According to information AI received from the Minister of Justice
- in May 1992, 58 prisoners had been sentenced to death in Belarus since
- 1988: 12 persons in that year, five in 1989, 20 in 1990 and 21 in 1991. All
- sentences were for premeditated, aggravated murder. In the same period four
- sentences had been commuted - three in 1988 and one in 1990 - and 32
- executions carried out. No figures were available for 1992. The Minister
- also said that the draft criminal code envisaged a reduction in the number
- of peacetime offences carrying a possible death sentence to eight. However,
- speaking to the United Nations Human Rights Committee in Geneva in July he
- said the proposed reduction was to four offences: premeditated, aggravated
- murder; aggravated rape; kidnapping of a child; and acts of terrorism with
- aggravated circumstances.
-
- KAZAKHSTAN: The following statistics were passed to AI by the Deputy
- Justice Minister of Kazakhstan in April 1992. Figures for the number of
- executions carried out in each year were not made available.
-
- 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991
-
- Total number of 57 26 45 37 67
- death sentences
-
- Commutations* 9 13 5 6 26
-
- Pardons* 0 4 2 2 0
-
- * Figures as of April 1992
-
- RUSSIAN FEDERATION: At a press conference held in September 1992, a
- Ministry of Justice spokesperson revealed that 95 death sentences were
- passed in the first six months of 1992, all but one for premeditated,
- aggravated murder. The exception was one death sentence passed for
- "infringing the life of a militiaman".
-
- TADZHIKISTAN: Statistics made available to AI by the Commonwealth of
- Independent States (CIS) Statistical Committee in December 1992 indicate
- that six death sentences were passed in 1990 in Tadzhikistan and six in
- 1991. One execution was carried out in 1990 and none in 1991.
-
- FORMER USSR: REDUCTION OF CAPITAL OFFENCES
-
- ARMENIA: Armenia's parliamentary human rights committee reported that the
- death penalty had been abolished for all peacetime offences except
- aggravated murder and rape, according to an article in the "Respublika
- Armenia" newspaper in August 1992. AI believes that before this reduction,
- the Armenian Criminal Code retained a possible death penalty for 18
- offences in peacetime.
-
- Three people are currently under sentence of death in the Republic of
- Armenia. All were sentenced to death in 1990 by the Supreme Court of
- Armenia for premeditated, aggravated murder.
-
- KYRGYZSTAN: In October 1992 AI received notification by the Chairman of the
- State Committee for National Security, Anarbek Bakayev, that the Kyrgyzstan
- Supreme Soviet had recently abolished the death penalty for 12 articles of
- the criminal code. He did not specify which articles, nor the date of the
- Supreme Soviet's decision.
-
- The Kyrgyzstan Criminal Code therefore apparently retains the death penalty
- for six peacetime offences, reduced from 18 (the figure of 32 capital
- offences given to AI by the Justice Minister in April - see Death Penalty
- News June 1992 - apparently referred to both peacetime and wartime
- offences).
-
-
-
- GEORGIA: REINTRODUCTION OF THE DEATH PENALTY
-
- Although Georgia abolished the death penalty for all offences in February
- 1992 (see Death Penalty News, April 1992), the State Council reinstated
- this punishment for certain offences in May. The death sentences and
- executions reported since then have been in the context of the recent armed
- conflict in Abkhazia, a region in the north-west of Georgia. According to
- press reports an ethnic Russian, Vitaly Gladkikh, was sentenced to death by
- a court martial in the Abkhazian capital of Sukhumi, currently in Georgian
- hands, on 10 November 1992 and was executed on 15 November. He is said to
- have been accused of conducting mercenaries from the Russian Republic to
- Abkhazia, in order to fight on the Abkhazian side. In another case the
- Georgian State Minister for Abkhazian Affairs was quoted on 18 November as
- saying that ethnic Georgian Gia Khachirashvili had been shot "recently"
- after being convicted of treason by a court martial in Sukhumi.
-
- In addition, according to the Chairman of the Abkhazian Human Rights and
- Inter-ethnic Relations Committee, twelve people were executed for looting
- by units under the control of the Abkhazian military commandant in the city
- of Gagra at the beginning of October 1992.
- ** End of text from cdp:justice.usa **
-
-