May 27



HUNGARY:

PM proposes to debate EU on having capital punishment instead of real life prison sentence



Hungary must remain a member of the European Union and NATO, the prime minister said during questions in Parliament. In response to a question by Gabor Vona, leader of the radical nationalist Jobbik party, concerning whether a referendum would be held on renegotiating Hungary's position with the EU, Viktor Orban said Jobbik "can hide behind a referendum" but "the fact is that Jobbik wants us to leave the EU and NATO." It is in the interest of the Hungarian people that Hungary should remain a member of both organisations, he said.

Meanwhile, Jobbik lawmaker Adam Mirkoczki asked Orban to support a parliamentary debate on capital punishment, initiated by Jobbik. Mirkoczki noted that in 2012 Orban had referred to EU principles to explain why the death penalty would not be restored. Noting the murder of a young tobacconist in south-west Hungary, Orban insisted the EU had "attacked" the implementation of real life prison sentences and now the situation had changed. If Brussels can "force" the country to let habitual offenders back into society then "we shouldn't take defensive action but instead take a step forward." "We need to respond by saying: let's have a debate on capital punishment," Orban said.

(source: politics.hu)








PAKISTAN----impending executions

PIA Flight 544 hijackers to be hanged on Thursday



The convicts in hijacking case of Flight 544 Shahsawar Baloch and Sabir Baloch are scheduled to be executed by handing on Thursday at Hyderabad Central Jail, Dunya News reported.

The terrorists had hijacked a passenger flight on May 25, 1998 with 33 passengers and 5 crew members on board in order to stop testing of nuclear weapons Pakistan developed.

The flight took off from Gwadar International Airport and was scheduled to land at Hyderabad airport. The told the pilot to take the flight to New Delhi. What followed is no less than a plot of an action film.

The pilots told the hijackers that the flight, Fokker F27 model, did not have enough fuel to make it to New Delhi to which the hijackers demanded to land the flight at nearest airport in India.

The pilot then contacted Hyderabad airport and addressed it as Bhuj airport. Comprehending the signal, Hyderabad airport staff pretended to be from Bhuj airport and told the pilot Bhuj was waiting for the plane to land. This was a sort of assurance for the hijackers.

The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) had intercepted the communication and joined the operation.

Upon landing, Rangers' Major Aamir Hashmi, SSP Akhtar Gorchani, and Deputy Commissioner Suhail Akbar Shah waited outside the aircraft while dressed as Indian personnel which led the hijackers to believe they had landed in India.

Acting as Indian airport staff, communicating in Hindi and introducing themselves to the hijackers with Indian names, Pakistani officials successfully convinced the hijackers to let women and children go.

The final showdown happened when the commandos' reinforcement stormed the aircraft chanting "Allahu Akbar" (God is great) slogan which left the hijackers shot. 1 of the hijackers fired at Deputy Commissioner but missed and shot one of his own accomplices instead.

Subsequently the hijackers were arrested and transferred to Karachi for prosecution. The anti-terrorism court awarded them death penalty and despite issuance of death warrants only to be canceled owing to temporary moratorium on death penalty.

However, the fresh death warrants have been issued and their execution is scheduled for May 28, the date on which Pakistan successfully test fired nuclear weapons in 1998.

The final meeting of death-row inmates with the families took place on Wednesday at the Central Jail.

Talking to the press, Shahsawar's son said that his father is 'innocent' and should be pardoned.

(source: Dunya News)








ALGERIA:

Algeria sentences 12 Islamists to death over 2008 bombing



An Algerian court sentenced 12 Islamist militants to death today and 2 more to life imprisonment for their involvement in a 2008 bombing that killed a Frenchman and his driver.

The APS news agency said the accused were all members of Katibat el-Arkam, the most dangerous branch of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), and were behind several attacks in the Boumerdes region 50 kilometres east of Algiers.

Those given the death penalty are all on the run and were sentenced in absentia by Algiers criminal court, while the 2 present in court were sentenced to life.

All were found guilty of "forming an armed terrorist group and premeditated voluntary homicide".

The 2 defendants in court, Khaled Asalah and Brahim Brahim, admitted membership of AQIM and taking part in several attacks.

On June 9, 2008, engineer Pierre Nowacki of the French firm BTP Razel and his Algerian driver were killed by a remotely controlled roadside bomb in the Beni Amrane area east of the capital.

A 2nd blast in the area minutes later wounded 7 people.

The Frenchman had been overseeing repair work on a railway tunnel.

(source: The Business Standard)








SAUDI ARABIA:

Saudi execution surge 'very disturbing': UN rapporteur



Saudi Arabia's execution surge is "very disturbing" and out of line with global trends, the UN special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions told AFP Wednesday.

He spoke as the number of beheadings in the kingdom hit 89, compared with 87 during all of 2014, according to tallies by AFP.

"It is certainly very disturbing that there is such a fast pace of executions at the moment," Christof Heyns said in a telephone interview from South Africa.

"If it continues at this pace we will have double the number of executions, or more than double the number of executions than we had last year."

Heyns, who submits annual reports to the U.N. Human Rights Council and General Assembly, said Riyadh's use of the death penalty "is just so way out of line" with global trends where the number of executions and states which apply the death penalty is decreasing.

"So this is going in the opposite direction. It's going against the stream," he said.

Heyns, a professor of human rights law at the University of Pretoria, said statistics indicate that Saudi Arabia last year had the world's third highest number of executions after China and Iran.

He said there are a number of concerns about the kingdom's use of the death penalty.

Under international law, if capital punishment is imposed at all it should only be for murder, he said.

But in Saudi Arabia "more than half" the executions are for non-lethal crimes.

Under the Gulf nation's strict version of Islamic sharia law, drug trafficking, rape, murder, apostasy and armed robbery are all punishable by death, as are other offences including espionage.

In a country of about 29 million, a "very high number of people for the population" are sentenced to death and executed, the special rapporteur said.

"It seems that many of these trials are in secrecy and that lawyers are not available and they do not comply with the standards of fair trial."

Saudi Arabia's Interior Ministry has cited deterrence as a reason for implementing capital punishment.

(source: The Daily Star)

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

89 in 5 months: Saudi Arabia continues executions



A man was beheaded in Saudi Arabia on Wednesday, with the convicted murderer's execution becoming the 89th case this year, according to an AFP count. The death toll has already overtaken the total for all of 2014.

Fahd bin Hussein Daghriri was found guilty in participating in the murder of a fellow Saudi citizen, AFP reported on Wednesday, citing an interior ministry statement published by the official Saudi Press Agency. Authorities executed the convicted criminal in the southern region of Jazan.

The man was sentenced to death according to the nation's strict version of Islamic sharia law, under which such crimes as murder, rape, armed robbery and drug trafficking are punishable by death. Executions are mostly conducted by decapitating the accused with a sword in public.

The Gulf kingdom had already executed 88 people across 2015 before the newest case, both locals and foreigners. This month, 5 foreigners were executed in Saudi Arabia, causing international outcry, with human rights groups having condemned the country.

Daghriri's beheading was the 89th since the beginning of the year. In comparison, in all of 2014, 87 people were executed in Saudi Arabia.

The "fast pace" of executions in Saudi Arabia was deemed "very disturbing" by a UN special rapporteur.

"If it continues at this pace we will have double the number of executions, or more than double the number of executions, that we had last year," Christof Heyns who submits annual reports to the UN Human Rights Council and General Assembly, told AFP on Wednesday.

Observing that how, in a country of approximately 29 million, the number of people sentenced to death and executed is "very high," Heyns said Saudi Arabia "is going against the stream," while execution figures are decreasing in other countries.

The UN official called the practice "something which really doesn't belong in the 21st century," adding that in the Gulf kingdom trials leading to beheadings are often carried out "in secrecy," with lawyers being unavailable. "They do not comply with the standards of fair trial," Heyns told AFP.

Out of the 22 countries currently known to practice capital punishment, in 2014 Saudi Arabia was ranked 3rd on Amnesty International's list of countries that carry out the most executions, surpassing Iraq and the United States.

(source: rt.com)



CHINA:

China's top court stresses death penalty for drug crimes



The Supreme People's Court (SPC) on Wednesday published a circular emphasizing that death penalty should be used to punish drug crime.

In cases involving drug lords, professional drug dealers or re-offenders, if the crimes were serious enough, capital punishment should be handed down, said the circular formulated at a recent national conference on trials of drug crimes.

Death sentences may also be used to punish drug smuggling, organized transnational drug crime and armed or violent drug crime.

The top court also required more stricter standards for reprieves, ruling them out for re-offenders.

Reprieves for those found to have induced, instigated, conned or forced others to commit drug crimes should also be strictly controlled, the SPC said.

Abatements or probation for sentenced drug gang bosses, professional traffickers and re-offenders also needs to be scrutinized, the circular added.

The document went on that the amount of narcotics the suspects held for their own use will no longer be an element when the judges decide on convictions, and such facts will only be considered during the sentencing process.

The circular pledged equal punishment for drug-related crimes conducted via the Internet and vowed to step up the confiscation of the drug criminals' assets.

(source: Global Times)

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

Former Chinese legislator stands trial for sex business



A 5-star hotel owner and former national legislator went on trial in south China's Guangdong province for alleged involvement in prostitution, Xinhua news agency reported on Wednesday.

Liang Yaohui, and his 46 hotel employees, were accused of arranging prostitutes, including underage girls, in Crown Prince Hotel in Dongguan city since 2004, according to Dongguan Intermediate People's Court.

The city, which is about 80 km away from provincial capital Guangzhou, is famous for casinos, bath houses and massage parlours.

The hotel made about 48.7 million yuan ($7.8 million) by organising over 100,000 illegal sexual acts in 2013, according to the court.

In February 2014, Liang's hotel was closed down together with some other hotels and entertainment venues involved in sex trade in Dongguan after media exposed the city's sex business. The scandal was followed by a 3-month crackdown on prostitution in Guangdong.

Liang, born in 1967, was stripped of the title as a deputy to the National People's Congress (NPC), China's top legislature, after being detained in April 2014.

Prostitution has been outlawed in China since the People's Republic of China was founded in 1949. According to Chinese laws, organising prostitution can result in life in prison or even the death penalty.

(source: The Business Standard)








BANGLADESH:

Mujahid appeal verdict June 16



The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court has fixed June 16 for delivering its verdict on an appeal filed by Jamaat leader Ali Ahsan Muhammad Mujahid, challenging his death penalty. The 4-member Appellate Division bench headed by Chief Justice SK Sinha passed the order on Wednesday afternoon.

On July 17 last year, International Crimes Tribunal 2 awarded the death penalty to Jamaat leader Mujaheed for committing crimes against humanity during the Liberation War.

He received death penalties in 2 cases filed for abetting and facilitating the killing of intellectuals during the Liberation War and participating in and facilitating the murder of 9 Hindu civilians in Faridpur.

On August 11 last year, Mujahid filed an appeal with the Appellate Division against his capital punishment.

On April 29, the SC started the appeal hearing of the condemned prisoner for committing crimes against humanity during the Liberation War.

(source: Dhaka Tribune)

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

Bangladesh to 'form tribunals at divisional headquarters to try human trafficking offences'



Law Minister Anisul Huq today said the government will form 7 special tribunals at 7 divisional headquarters of the country to try and punish the offences of human trafficking, and curb such crimes.

District and session judges concerned will conduct the tribunals, which will be established under the Human Trafficking Deterrence and Suppression Act 2012, the minister said while talking to reporters after a meeting with Swedish Ambassador Johan Frisell at his Secretariat office.

Highest punishment for such organised crimes under this law is death penalty, he added.

The law minister said his ministry has already sent proposal for formation of the tribunals to the ministries concerned.

He said there are 557 cases, filed on charges of human trafficking, are pending with different courts across the country. Charge sheets were submitted in 257 cases and trial proceedings of 12 cases have been finished, he said.

Anisul also said the trial proceedings of the pending cases will be conducted at the women and children repression prevention tribunals concerned of the districts until the special tribunals are established in the divisional headquarters.

(source: The Daily Star)

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