July 6



ETHIOPIA:

UN calls for 'immediate release' of British activist jailed in Ethiopia


United Nations (UN) has called for the immediate release of an Ethiopian-British citizen being held on death row in Ethiopia for more than a year, a case which campaigners have claimed exposes Britain's poor diplomacy.

The United Nations (UN) has called for the immediate release of an Ethiopian-British citizen being held on death row in Ethiopia for more than a year, a case which campaigners have claimed exposes Britain's poor diplomacy.

Signalling an abrupt hardening of its stance on the case, experts from the UN Human Rights Council have asked Ethiopia to pay Andargachew Tsige 'adequate compensation' before sending him home to London, reported The Guardian.

An 8-page judgement handed to Ethiopia by the UNHRC's working group on arbitrary detention also claimed that 'reliable evidence' had suggested possible situation of physical abuse and mistreatment which could amount to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.

Earlier, internal Foreign Office emails, disclosed for the 1st time, had revealed that Tsige was abducted and jailed in an unknown location in June 2014, with many British officials voicing fears about real risk of torture if Tsige was returned to Ethiopia.

The 60-year-old was detained at Yemen's main airport while in transit and forcibly moved to the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa. He is a prominent opposition politician and an outspoken critic of the Ethiopian government and the country's human rights record.

(source: The Financial Express)






SOUTH KOREA:

Lawmakers push to abolish death penalty


Lawmakers here Monday submitted a bipartisan bill to the National Assembly proposing to abolish the death penalty, citing a clause in the South Korean Constitution that obligates citizens to "respect human dignity."

South Korea last carried out its last death sentence in December 1997. Amnesty International considers Korea a de facto abolitionist country, according to a 2014 report by the human rights nongovernmental organization.

But the new draft bill aims to raise Korea's status to an outright abolitionist country, chief sponsor Rep. Yoo Ihn-tae of the main opposition New Politics Alliance for Democracy said, citing decades of efforts by human rights workers to have the practice outlawed here.

Rep. Yoo Ihn-tae of the main opposition New Politics Alliance for Democracy submits an anti-death penalty draft bill early Monday. (Yonhap) "It is time we illegalize the death penalty here, in a country that has produced a U.N. secretary-general and is a member of the U.N. Human Rights Council," Yoo added, referring to U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon.

"It's time that we declare the death penalty something that goes against our country's conscience."

At least 61 have been sentenced to death here, according to Amnesty International.

Lawmakers proposed 6 draft bills from 1999 to 2010 proposing to abolish the death penalty outright. But the draft bills failed to pass Korea's unicameral parliament.

Yoo's proposed bill comes nearly five years after the last anti-death penalty bill was chiefly sponsored by lawmaker Joo Sung-young of the Grand National Party, a precursor to the ruling Saenuri Party, in November 2010.

The draft bill must pass the Legislation and Judiciary Committee and plenary voting at the National Assembly, before receiving final approval from the Cabinet for it to become law. More than 170 of the Assembly's 298 lawmakers have signed on to the proposed bill as cosponsors.

South Korea was among the 34 countries that abstained on a U.N. General Assembly vote to abolish the death penalty in December last year.

(source: Korea Herald)






NORTH KOREA:

North Korea has carried out 1,400 public executions since 2000, report claims


Nearly 1,400 North Koreans were publicly executed between 2000 and 2013, according to new research, which suggests that the number of these deaths peaked at 160 in 2009. Further increases after 2013 have also been reported.

The Korean Institute for National Unification, funded by the South Korean government, said in its annual white paper on human rights in North Korea that 1,382 executions took place in public in the 13-year period.

The figures, which cannot be independently verified, were said to be based on in-depth interviews with North Korean defectors and confirmed by witnesses in the country. The number of executions carried out away from the public eye is also impossible to ascertain.

North Korean media have reported only 2 executions in 2014 and none so far this year, according to Cornell University's Death Penalty Watch research group. During 2009, only 1 was officially reported.

But the South Korean newspaper Joongang Daily reported in late 2013 that thousands of North Koreans had been forced to attend executions by firing squad held in stadiums, the 1st known large-scale public executions under Kim Jong-un's leadership.

Public executions are considered to be a way to keep the population in line. According to witness testimonies from the DPRK, public executions for watching or distributing South Korean films and drug smuggling have increased in recent years, as well sentences for "crimes against the regime". Many more are punished by being sent to work-camps, with Amnesty International estimating that 200,000 North Koreans are in prison.

North Korea does not allow access to human rights groups, but an Amnesty report confirms the 2013 spike in executions, claiming that at least 70 death sentences were carried out in the DPRK, from a total of 776 around the world.

Amnesty said the actual number was likely to be far higher, but even without taking this into account North Korea, a country with 0.3% of the world's people, carries out nearly 10% of its confirmed executions.

This total is still less than Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia, which account for 80% of the world's confirmed executions between them. The US executed 761 people between 2000 and 2013, according to the Death Penalty Information Centre, but many countries, most notably China, refuse to reveal the number of people sentenced to death by the state.

Since 1996, the South Korean unification institute has published annual statistics on executions. This year's figures were based on testimonies of 221 North Korean defectors, selected based on demographics and background, of the total 1,396 escapees who came to South Korea last year.

(source: The Guardian)






IRAN:

2 Women Sentenced to Death Pardoned by Plaintiffs----Plaintiffs have helped save 2 women from death row in Iran through a pardon


During a recent meeting of "peace and reconciliation" between prisoners in Isfahan's central prison and a number of plaintiffs 2 women sentenced to death and 6 women charged with financial crimes were pardoned, according to a report by the public relations office of prisons in Isfahan.

The meeting, reportedly the first of its kind at the prison, was held to reportedly help reduce the amount of prisoners behind bars. The meeting was reportedly attended by Iranian actor Hassan Aklili, a number of clerics and also the director of prisons in the province of Alborz. Additionally, 17 other plaintiffs have reportedly agreed to pardon prisoners with financial crimes under the condition that they pay back their debt.

(source: Iran Human Rights)


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