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[Deathpenalty] death penalty news-----worldwide

Rick Halperin
Tue, 22 Jul 2008 17:05:51 -0500 (Central Daylight Time)





July 22



EUROPEAN UNION/IRAN:

EU alarmed over planned executions of juvenile offenders in Iran


The European Union leadership said it was "deeply worried" about the
imminent execution of two juvenile offenders in Iran.

The EU, currently chaired by France, said in a statement that it
"deplores" Iranian authorities' decision to execute Mohammed Fadaei and
Behnood Shojaee despite appeals by Brussels to commute their sentences.

The convicts' crimes were not clear. In Iran, capital crimes include
murder, rape and drug trafficking.

The EU statement Tuesday said death sentences against minors are
"unacceptable" and a "flagrant violation of Iran's international
obligations and commitments."

Iran executed a Kurdish-Iranian 16-year-old boy in June and Human Rights
Watch recently said Iran plans to put four minors to death this summer.

(source: Associated Press)






NIGERIA:

MPs Shout Down Abolition Bill


Hopes of a reprieve for hundreds of death row inmates in Nigeria were
dashed when MPs threw out a bill which would have commuted all death
sentences to life imprisonment and down-graded robbery with violence to a
non-capital crime.

On July 10, MPs from all sides closed ranks to reject the death penalty
abolition bill which would also have lifted the threat of execution
hanging over several thousands awaiting capital trials, some of them for
many years. Rights activists were stunned by the degree of opposition to
the bill, particularly from politicians from the Christian south of the
country.

"Nobody shall kill another person -- in spite of (their) confessing to the
crime," Friday Itula, the bill's main sponsor, said when opening the
debate on the bill.

"No!" shouted furious MPs opposing this attempt to get these words written
into law and "abolish capital punishment in any form". From this moment
on, it was clear that the bill -- the first-ever attempt to challenge
Nigeria's death penalty in parliament -- was doomed.

Itula argued that capital punishment had outlived its usefulness in
Nigeria. It had failed to deliver up on its promises -- reformation,
retribution or deterrence.

The MP was supported in his abolition initiative by 2 other members from
the ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP), Samson Osagie and Patrick
Ikhariale.

All 3 co-sponsors come from Edo state, central southern Nigeria.

Leading the attack on the bill was Sada Soli, also a member of the PDP but
from Katsina state in the predominately Muslim north of the country.
Activists had predicted that the Muslim states, some of which have
introduced Sharia law, would oppose the bill.

"Abolition is a serious business," Soli said. "The law should take its
natural course. Anyone who takes another's life does not deserve (to keep)
his," he said.

Soli condemned foreign "interference" for pressuring Nigeria to abolish
capital punishment.

Listening to his remarks in the parliamentary public gallery were
representatives from NGOs, including the London-based Amnesty
International.

The bill was finally thrown out when the speaker asked MPs whether it
should be rejected.

"Yes," shouted most MPs in reply.

Later, Dr Olapade Agoro, a politician and chairman of the Conference of
Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP), said it was too early for Nigeria to
abolish capital punishment.

MPs should be spending their time seeking solutions to crime -- reducing
unemployment and raising the level of education -- rather than a "respite
for murderers".

"Most importantly, this idea is being copied from the United Kingdom --
and it's laughable. We must learn to develop our own ideas," he declared.

Yinka Odumakin, a politician and the national publicity secretary of
Afenifere, a socio-cultural organisation in south-eastern Nigeria, added
it would have been unwise for Nigeria to abolish capital punishment
because of its high crime and murder rate.

"But it (abolition) could be considered in the future when the country
becomes more enlightened and the avenues (are) created for people to make
wealth," he said guardedly.

Predictably, Professor Pat Utomi of the African Democratic Congress (ADC)
and presidential candidate in the April 2007 elections, expressed
disappointment at the bill's rejection. His party is strongly supported by
the younger, well-educated generation.

Leading NGOs and human rights campaigners sought to explain the reasons
for the scale of the parliamentary opposition to the bill.

Civil society organisations should have been more active before the
parliamentary vote, Olawale Fapohunda, managing partner of the rights
organisation Legal Resources Consortium, told IPS. Lawmakers had shown
they were ruled by an erroneous perception of crime.

But any "effective advocacy" had been hamstrung by lack of resources, he
explained.

Demian Ugwu of the Civil Liberty Organisation (CLO) agreed that the MPs
had rejected the bill out of fear of crime.

"But to us in the civil society, it is not a security issue but a social
one," he said.

Amnesty International (AI) expressed disappointment, suggesting that the
MPs appeared to have ignored its extensive reporting on the human rights
situation of those on Nigeria's death row.

Many death row inmates had not been given a fair trial, including legal
representation, or the right of appeal, Ausphus Guesto, an Amnesty
researcher told IPS.

There are believed to be more than 500 currently awaiting execution in
Nigeria, a country which claims not to have executed anyone since 1999.
This claim is disputed by AI and CLO. In 2007, Nigerian courts passed down
at least 20 death sentences, according to AI.

(source: IPS News)