June 2




KENYA:

Death penalty only way to rid Kenya of corruption, says Maanzo



Makueni MP Daniel Maanzo has proposed a death penalty for state officers found guilty of corruption.

He said the proposal should go through a referendum since the Supreme Court has made death sentence illegal in Kenya.

"Corruption in Kenya is at levels it cannot be fought without the death penalty," he said on Friday.

The legislator spoke at Kilungu secondary school in Kaiti constituency during the Madaraka Day celebrations.

"The option that will safeguard taxpayer's funds is amending the Constitution to have the death penalty back," Maanzo said.

The MP said he will table a Bill in parliament to restore clauses that warranted a death sentence for such economic crimes.

He spoke even as President Uhuru Kenyatta vowed to escalate the war on corruption by nabbing senior state officers.

The president told Kenyans to expect arrests of "big shots" implicated in graft.

(source: The Star)








ETHIOPIA:

Attorney general says decision for Andargachew Tsige's pardon was part of moves intended to 'widen political space'.



Ethiopia has pardoned an opposition leader with British citizenship who had been sentenced to death.

Andargachew Tsige was found guilty of "terrorism" and sentenced in absentia in 2009 over his role in the opposition group Ginbot 7. He was the organisation's secretary-general.

The father of 3 was arrested during a stopover at a Yemen airport in June 2014 and taken to Ethiopia.

Berhanu Tsegaye, Ethiopia's attorney general, said on Saturday that Andargachew was pardoned "under special circumstances" along with 575 other inmates.

The decisions were made with the "intention of widening political space," the attorney general told reporters in the capital, Addis Ababa.

Andargachew is expected to be released within the next 2 days.

Yemi Hailemariam, Andargachew's wife, said she hoped he would be allowed to return to Britain soon.

"I am so thankful that the pain and anguish my children have had to go through could now soon be coming to an end," she said in a statement issued by Reprieve, a human rights group.

(source: aljazeera.com)








ZAMBIA:

Zambian president pardons 464 prisoners as part of Africa Freedom Day commemoration



Zambian President Edgar Lungu on Thursday pardoned 464 prisoners as part of the commemoration of this year's Africa Freedom Day which fell on May 25.

Minister of Home Affairs Stephen Kampyongo said the Zambian leader pardoned the inmates from various correctional facilities across the country in exercise of his prerogative mercy powers enshrined in the country's constitution.

The Zambian minister said Lungu pardoned 413 inmates as well as commuted sentences of 51 others who were on death row.

He has since commended the Zambian leader for pardoning the inmates, saying it will go a long way in decongesting the country's correction facilities which currently holds over 21,000 inmates against a holding capacity of about 8,000.

The pardoned inmates, he said, have shown that they have reformed during their time in prison and were ready to be reintegrated into society.

He called on society to embrace the inmates and not to discriminate against them so that they could fully integrate and contribute to the country's development.

()source: xinhuanet.com)








INDIA:

HC seeks Centre's response on plea for abolishing death penalty



The Delhi High Court on Friday issued notice to the Centre and others on a plea that sought abolition of the death penalty to those accused of minors' gang rape.

A bench of Acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C. Hari Shankar listed the matter for July 31.

Social Action Forum for Manav Adhikar (SAFMA) had moved the court through advocate Charu Walikhanna, seeking declaration of Sections 5 and 6 of the Criminal Law (Amendment) Ordinance, 2018, (prescribing death sentence for gang rape of children under the age of 12) as void, being in derogation of Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution.

In the wake of widespread outrage over the gang rape and murder of an 8-year-old girl in Jammu and Kashmir and succumbing to political expediency, the impugned ordinance had been introduced, the plea said.

The petitioner claimed that the ordinance was brought without conducting proper research, adding that no prior consultations were held with the Law Commission, National Human Rights Commission and the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights.

The plea said that capital punishment is neither a solution nor deterrence against heinous crime.

The petitioner also sought the setting up of a committee headed by a NHRC member to come out with steps to tackle rapes, especially of minor girls, by adopting scientific principles and data.

(source: thequint.com)

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

Delhi HC questions scientific basis of death penalty for child rape----The court issued a notice to the Ministry of Home Affairs and sought their stand on the issue in four weeks. It listed the matter for further hearing on July 31.



The Delhi High Court Friday questioned the Centre's move to approve an Ordinance that allows courts to award death penalty to those convicted of raping children up to 12 years and asked if any scientific assessment was conducted before it was approved.

A bench of acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C Hari Shankar asked the Centre whether they had conducted a study in comparison to foreign laws to ascertain if "death penalty will be deterrent to rape accused". "Have you (Centre) conducted any scientific assessment or study before passing of your ordinance," the bench asked standing counsel Jasmeet Singh, who is representing the Centre.

Replying to the query, Singh said the government has come to the conclusion after voluminous research. He said "in India the highest number of cases were related to child rape".

The court issued a notice to the Ministry of Home Affairs and sought their stand on the issue in 4 weeks. It listed the matter for further hearing on July 31.

Earlier, the court had asked if the Ordinance, was the "effect of the public outcry".

The Criminal Laws (Amendment) Ordinance, 2018, was approved soon after a public outrage over the rape and murder of an 8-year-old girl in Kathua, Jammu, and allegations of rape against a BJP MLA in Unnao, Uttar Pradesh. The Ordinance, which allows imposition of death penalty for a child rapist under 12 and prescribes a minimum of 20 years for rape of a girl below 16. It has been promulgated by President Ram Nath Kovind.

The High Court's made the oral observation while hearing 2 separate PILs filed by the Social Action Forum for Manav Adhikar and the ApneAap Women Worldwide's plea challenging the Ordinance.

Advocate Charu Wali Khanna, appearing for Social Action Forum, sought the court's direction to constitute a committee, headed by member NHRC, to come out with preventive measures to control the incidents of rapes, especially of minor girls, based on scientific principles.

Advocate Kirti Singh, appearing for ApneAap, submitted the Ordinance was passed as a knee-jerk reaction following the Kathua and Unnao rape cases and has been drafted in a confused, hasty manner.

(source: The Indian Express)








PAKISTAN:

Murder convicts get death penalty, life term



A sessions court sentenced a man to death for 2 counts of murder, while another convict was jailed for life for involvement in a triple murder case in Sargodha. The judgment was announced by Additional District and Sessions Judge Ahmed Sher Dil Cheema.

The prosecution told the court that accused Hamid Farooq, Sultan Sikander and Rizwan Sikandar had gunned down Sultan Mehmood, Zahooran Bibi and Sardaran Bibi an over enmity in 2010. The local police registered a case against the accused and presented the challan before the court.

After hearing the arguments, the judge handed down death sentence to Hamid along with a fine of Rs0.2 million which would be paid to the legal heirs of the deceased.

Murder convict gets death penalty

The court also awarded life imprisonment to Sultan and imposed a fine of Rs0.2 million. However, the judge acquitted another co-accused after giving him the benefit of doubt.

Earlier, a court awarded a death sentence to an accused for his involvement in a murder case in Sargodha. Additional District and Sessions Judge Irfan Ahmed Shaikh announced the verdict.

Convict Ramzan and his accomplices Zaman and Yar had killed Shahid over a dispute in 2014. The local police registered a case against the accused and presented the challan before the court.

After hearing arguments, the judge handed down a death sentence to Ramzan along with a fine of Rs0.53 million.

(source: The Express Tribune)

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