http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/front/1743823

Mexico will today urge the World Court to order stays of execution and
retrials for more than 50 Mexicans on death row in the United States.
The move reflects the deep disquiet among some of Washington's closest
allies over capital punishment, which has led to protests from leading
European states and Pope John Paul.

Mexico, which does not have the death penalty, says the United States
violated the Mexicans' rights by failing to tell them they were entitled to
consular assistance after arrest.

The 54 were condemned in 10 states including Illinois, where State Governor
George Ryan this month took the unprecedented and widely lauded step of
commuting the sentences of everyone on the state's death row, declaring the
execution system "broken."

Three Mexicans were spared death by the Illinois decision, which came just
days after Mexico brought its case to the International Court of Justice, or
World Court, in The Hague.

A court spokeswoman said Mexico was free to amend details of its application
in the light of the Illinois move.

Mexico has clashed repeatedly with the United States over the death penalty
in connection with its nationals sentenced to death there.

Mexico's case in The Hague is that the United States violated international
legal obligations in its treatment of the Mexicans who should therefore be
retried.

The Vienna Convention on Consular Relations obliges local authorities to
inform an arrested person without delay of his right to speak to consular
officials of his country. Mexico says U.S. authorities breached this
convention for the Mexicans.

"Mexico wants to request the U.S. to stay the executions, so that none of
these 54 Mexicans is executed before the court comes to a final decision on
whether the U.S. violated the Convention," said court spokeswoman Laurence
Blairon.

LEGAL URGENCY

The United States and Japan are the only rich, industrial nations to execute
convicted criminals: the last person executed in the European Union was
guillotined in France in 1977. Pope John Paul has called for a worldwide ban
on the death penalty, saying there were practically no cases where it was
necessary.

The World Court usually takes years to reach final judgements, which are
binding and cannot be appealed. Highlighting the case's urgency, Mexico has
said a date may be set as soon as February 14 for one of the executions.

A similar case came before the court in 2001 when the United States was
found to have breached the Convention in the case of two German-born
brothers executed in Arizona in 1999.

Germany only learned of the situation of Karl and Walter LaGrand -- who
stabbed to death a bank manager in a botched robbery -- when they were
already on death row, 10 years after the crime and their arrests.

Walter was gassed to death in March 1999, the day after the World Court
issued an emergency order to postpone the execution. Karl had been put to
death before Germany filed the case.

Mexico recently clashed with the United States on the death penalty when
Texas executed a Mexican citizen in August for the 1988 murder of an
undercover Dallas police officer despite pleas for his life from the Mexican
president.

Following that execution, Fox cancelled a three-day trip to Texas in what
his spokesman said was meant as "an unequivocal sign of our rejection of the
execution."



xponent
Outside Interference Maru
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________________________________
You are a fluke of the universe.
You have no right to be here.
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