The next news posting to this list will be either Friday or Saturday, Oct. 27th or 28th


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Oct. 25



KENYA:

Kenyan husband facing the death penalty as he's accused of executing his Australian wife, 40, with a single gunshot to the neck



The estranged husband of Australian teacher Gabrielle Maina could face the death penalty in Kenya if he is charged and convicted of her murder.

The 40-year-old mother of 2 boys, aged 8 and 4, was killed by a single gunshot to the neck in the upmarket Nairobi suburb of Karen last Thursday.

Her husband Cyrus Bernard Maina Njuguna and another man, John Njuguna Waithira, were arrested over the shooting and faced court on Tuesday.

The investigation is still in the early stages and charges have not been laid against the arrested men.

The Kenyan judiciary has warned the pair could face a 'mandatory death penalty' if charged and convicted.

Their lawyer Wilfred Nderishu told the ABC his clients were innocent and there was evidence to show neither was at the scene of the killing.

'There is evidence that is capable of corroboration by many people, as many as 10, that Cyrus was in his office at the time that the murder took place,' Mr Nderishu said.

'Therefore, there is no way he can be placed at the scene.'

The court granted police a request to hold the two men in custody for another seven days while they gather evidence. They are next due to appear on October 31.

Before Tuesday's court hearing Ms Maina's lawyer, George King'ori, who became her legal representative ahead of her death, said the couple was in the midst of divorce proceedings in the Kenyan courts.

The head teacher at Hillcrest Prepatory School in Karen was granted a restraining order against her husband in April.

'She feared he had become irrational,' Mr King'Ori told AAP.

Karen police have confirmed to Kenya's The Standard that Mr Maina was being held as the prime suspect in Ms Maina's murder.

'We believe he has information that can help us know how and why she was murdered,' Karen OCPD Cunningham Suiyanka told the newspaper.

'He is here with another suspect for interrogation.'

Police have also seized and are checking Ms Maina's phone, which was taken by one of her alleged attackers.

Investigators believe she was accosted by three men while walking home after dropping off one of her sons at a friend's home.

A post-mortem revealed she was shot in the neck, with the bullet exiting through her back, authorities said.

Because of the angle of the bullet and marks on her knees, investigators believe she was kneeling at the time.

Ms Maina moved to Nairobi from Sydney in 2015 so her 2 sons could experience another culture and grow up near her husband's extended family, a friend told AAP.

She had taught English and drama for almost 5 years at Sarah Redfern High School in Sydney.

(source: dailymail.co.uk)








INDIA:

Dr Noose? Spare us - Doctors want no part in hangings



India's largest private body of doctors has taken the stand that physicians should not be asked to participate in executions, iterating a resolution passed by a global confederation of medical associations 5 years ago.

The Indian Medical Association (IMA) has asked the country's medical regulators to revise conduct codes to prevent doctors from playing any role in executions, in line with a 2012 resolution passed by the World Medical Association.

Under the existing protocol, prison doctors are expected to attend hangings to examine the convicts for signs of life and to pronounce death.

"No doctor should be present during the process of execution. This would be a violation of medical ethics and should be deemed professional misconduct," Krishan Kumar Aggarwal, senior cardiologist and IMA national president, said. He, however, clarified that a doctor may be requested to examine a body after an execution for certification of death.

In 2012, the World Medical Association had said in a resolution that it was "unethical for physicians to participate in capital punishment, in any way, or during any step of the execution process, including its planning and the instruction and/or training of persons to perform executions".

Aggarwal said the IMA was a member of the world body and, therefore, a signatory to all its policies and resolutions.

"We believe the (2012) resolution should be adopted in India and we have written to the Medical Council of India on this," he told The Telegraph.

A team of doctors from the Mumbai-based Forum for Medical Ethics had earlier taken the matter up with the National Human Rights Commission in 1994, arguing against doctors' presence at executions.

"It's good the IMA is finally taking a position on this," said Amar Jesani, physician and editor of the Indian Journal of Medical Ethics who had been among the doctors who had met the rights panel.

What if a doctor examines a just-hanged convict at the execution site and finds him still alive, Jesani asked. "Should the doctor say, 'Continue with the hanging'? How can a doctor ever say that?"

Aggarwal said the IMA had decided to take the matter up after Bangladeshi representatives complained at a conference of medical associations in Japan last month that doctors in their country had been forced to participate in executions.

Many countries have witnessed debate on the subject, with some doctors suggesting that physicians can help reduce unnecessary suffering during executions.

A US-based anaesthesiologist had a decade ago argued in a medical journal that "if state administration of capital punishment is legal and ongoing, humane methods of executions should be sought and applied".

Such arguments had emerged after medical experts in 2005 claimed that the anaesthesia methods used in lethal-injection executions, practised in America, were "flawed" and may have led to "unnecessary suffering".

A Cornell Law School website tracking the death penalty worldwide lists 4 hangings in India since 2004: Yakub Memon (1993 Bombay blasts), Afzal Guru (2001 Parliament attack), Ajmal Kasab ((2008 Mumbai attacks) and Calcutta security guard Dhananjoy Chatterjee (rape and murder of a 14-year-old girl).

(source: The Telegraph)

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Death by hanging is cruel and barbaric, feel most panelists



The latest edition of India Legal show deliberated on the contentious issue of death penalty by hanging and whether death penalty should be abolished or not.

Rajshri Rai, Editor in Chief, APN anchored the show. The panellists included:

Rai started the debate by asking Malhotra who has filed a PIL in the Supreme Court asking for alternative systems other than hanging in death. She asked Malhotra that his main prayer in the PIL is to allow other alternatives for death penalty "What is your basis for filing this PIL? Is it based on law commission reports or on any other information?" Rai asked.

Malhotra replied: "The law commission report came at around 2012-2013. But before that in 1996, a Supreme Court constitution bench in Gyan Kaur case had categorically noted that Right to Die also means Right to Die with Dignity. And Right to Die with Dignity is also a fundamental right. So my contention is when law commission in its 187th report has categorically said that hanging is a barbaric, cruel method to execute somebody so certainly this undermines the line of argument of law commission."

Tulsi disagreed with Malhotra. He said: "There is no painless death. And the most painless death is by hanging. The scientists have regarded hanging as the best form of death penalty. It is better than shooting, lethal injection and various other systems which mutilates the body and make people suffer. I really think considering the resources in Indian jails, this is the best alternative."

Justice Mathur held contrarian view and adjudged that the lethal injection was the best alternative. Justice Mathur pointed out: "I think, all panelists on this show have agreed that death penalty by hanging is cruel. I think lethal injection is most appropriate."

(source: indialegallive.com)

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High Court sets aside death penalty of 'Cyanide' Mohan



The High Court of Karnataka on Tuesday set aside the 2nd death penalty imposed by a trial court on Mohan Kumar - who argued his case personally - and acquitted him of the charges of murdering a woman by making her consume a liquid mixed with cyanide after sexually abusing her.

The court, however, convicted him of the robbery charge as he had escaped with jewellery of the woman, and sentenced him to 5 years rigorous imprisonment. The court did not find evidence for any other charges levelled against him.

A Division Bench comprising Justice Ravi Malimath and Justice John Michael Cunha passed the order while partly allowing Kumar's appeal and rejecting the reference made by the trial court in Mangaluru for confirming the death penalty.

The trial court had convicted him of various charges, including kidnap, rape, and murder of a 32-year-old-woman, who was a native Bantwal taluk in Dakshina Kannada district.

Kumar, who hails from Dakshina Kannada, has been portrayed as a serial killer by the investigating agency as he has been charge-sheeted in 20 cases of murdering women by using cyanide.

He has been convicted in 4 cases - he has been sentenced to death by the trial court in 3 cases, and to life imprisonment in 1 case.

The High Court has now turned down death penalty in 2 cases. In another case, the High Court on October 12 reduced the sentence to imprisonment for life without any provision for remission. In 2 cases, Kumar presented arguments personally by discontinuing service of an advocate.

(source: The Hindu)








UNITED ARAB EMIRATES:

UAE court commutes death penalty of 5 in murder case



A Sharjah (UAE) court has commuted the death sentence of 5 Indians, including 4 Punjabis, to 3-year imprisonment in a murder case.

In a video message sent from Dubai, SP Singh Oberoi, managing trustee of Sarbat Da Bhala Charitable Trust, said all of them would be released soon as they had already been in jail for 6 years.

Varinder Chauhan of Azamgarh district (Uttar Pradesh) was killed in a clash between groups involved in the illicit liquor trade in Sharjah on November 4, 2011.

Dharmendra of Chhapra district (Bihar), Ravinder Singh of Ajnala (Amritsar), Ranjit Ram of Zeensra village (Nawanshahr), Dalwinder Singh of Mahilpur (Hoshiarpur) and Sucha Singh of Jasso Majra village (Patiala) were convicted of murder.

The parents of the accused contacted Oberoi, who got in touch with Chauhan's family in UP. After the payment of Rs20 lakh as blood money, the family gave its consent for pardoning the accused. The agreement was made last month.

Oberoi said the youths would be brought back to India once they got police clearance. "We will approach the Indian Consulate to arrange their air tickets. In case it can't help, the Trust will bear the expenses of their return," he added. He has saved 88 persons so far by paying blood money.

(source: tribuneindia.com)








IRAN:

At least 10 Prisoners Transferred to Solitary Confinement for Execution



At least 10 prisoners of Rajai Shahr Prison were transferred to solitary confinement yesterday. Most of the prisoners were sentenced to death on murder charges and all of them are scheduled to be executed on Wednesday October 25..

According to a close source, at least 10 prisoners from different wards were transferred to solitary confinement on October 23. These prisoners are sentenced to qisas (retribution death penalty) for murder charges, and if the plaintiffs don't give consent or accept to postpone the execution, the prisoners will be executed on the morning of Wednesday.

According to Iran Human Rights (IHR) sources, the identities of some of the prisoners are: Iman Rasekhi, Mojtaba Ghiyasvand, and Majid Nazifi from ward 1, Mahmood Khayyeri, Hamidreza Shojaiy, and Ne???mat Segundaz from ward 6.

Mojtaba Ghiyasvand had previously been transferred to solitary confinement twice, but each time he asked for time and was returned to his cell. Earlier, a close source told IHR, "Mojtaba has been sentenced to death on the charge of murdering someone in a tribal dispute. Although he insisted on his innocence at all stages of the proceedings, he was sentenced to death anyway."

According to IHR annual report on the death penalty, 142 of the 530 execution sentences in 2016 were implemented due to murder charges. There is a lack of a classification of murder by degree in Iran which results in issuing death sentence for any kind of murder regardless of intensity and intent.

(source: Iran Human Rights

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Iran Sentences 'Mossad Agent' to Death Over Scientist Killings



Iran has sentenced to death a person found guilty of providing information to Israel to help it assassinate several senior nuclear scientists, Tehran's prosecutor said on Tuesday.

At least 4 scientists were killed between 2010 and 2012 in what Tehran said was a programme of assassinations aimed at sabotaging its nuclear energy programme. Iran hanged 1 man in 2012 over the killings, saying he had links to Israel.

On the latest conviction, Tehran prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi told the judiciary's news agency: "The person had several meetings with (Israeli intelligence agency) Mossad and provided them with sensitive information about Iran's military and nuclear sites in return for money and residency in Sweden."

The headline of the report described the convicted person as a "Mossad agent".

Dolatabadi did not identify the defendant, but Amnesty International said on Monday that Ahmadreza Djalali, an Iranian doctor who studied and taught in Sweden, had been sentenced to death in Iran on espionage charges.

Amnesty said the court verdict states that Djalali worked with the Israeli government and that it subsequently helped him obtain a residency permit in Sweden.

Neither Iran nor Amnesty said when the verdict was issued.

Sweden condemned the sentence and said it had brought the matter up at high-level meetings with Iranian representatives in Stockholm and Tehran.

"We condemn the use of the death penalty in all its forms. The death penalty is an inhuman, cruel and irreversible punishment that has no place in modern law," Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom said in an emailed comment.

Djalali was arrested in April 2016 and held without access to a lawyer for 7 months, 3 of which were in solitary confinement, according to London-based Amnesty.

"Djalali was sentenced to death after a grossly unfair trial that once again exposes not only the Iranian authorities' steadfast commitment to (the) use of the death penalty but their utter contempt for the rule of law," said Philip Luther, Amnesty's Middle East advocacy director.

The United States has denied Iran's accusation that it was involved in the scientists' deaths, while Israel has a policy of not commenting on such allegations.

Dolatabadi said the convicted person gave Mossad information about 30 nuclear and military scientists including Massoud Ali Mohammadi, who was killed by a remote-controlled bomb attached to a motorcycle outside his home in Tehran.

The judiciary said the defendant was also linked to the assassination of nuclear engineer Majid Shahriari, killed in a bomb attack in November 2010.

Djalali's wife Vida Mehrannia, who lives in Sweden with their 2 children, has told Amnesty that his physical and mental health has sharply deteriorated since he was detained.

"We are calling for his release because he has not committed any crime," Amnesty quoted her as saying.

(source: Reuters)
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