November 28



IRAN:

5 wildlife conservationists held by Iran could face the death penalty



Up to 6 conservation researchers accused of spying by the Iranian government could face the death penalty if convicted, according to multiple media reports.

Conservationists Niloufar Bayani, Taher Ghadirian, Houman Jowkar, Sepideh Kashani and Morad Tahbaz work with the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation on the conservation of different wildlife species in Iran, which includes monitoring animals such as Asiatic cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus venaticus) with camera traps. The country's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which reports to the country's supreme leader, alleges that the team used camera traps to collect information on Iran's missile program, Science magazine reported Oct. 30.

The 8 environmentalists from the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation currently being held in Iran on charges related to espionage.

The 5 are among a group of 8 - which also includes Amir Hossein Khaleghi, Abdolreza Kouhpayeh and Sam Rajabi from the same organization - being held in custody, according to The Guardian newspaper and other media reports. A sociologist and manager of the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation, Kavous Seyed Emami, who was arrested in early 2018, died under suspicious circumstances in February while in custody, observers said according to a report in The New York Times.

"This is a very bizarre charge to bring against environmental activists," Tara Sepehri Far, a researcher with Human Rights Watch (HRW), told Science.

After months of confinement, 5 of the 8 conservationists were charged with the crime of "sowing corruption on Earth" in early October, The Guardian wrote. (Science reported that only 4 of them - Bayani, Ghadirian, Jowkar and Tahbaz - were charged with the capital offense.)

"9 months of pre-trial detention with no clear charges and no access to a lawyer is an unusually long time even by Iran's dismal due process standards. It's hard not to conclude that the authorities are struggling to gather enough evidence to charge them with any recognizable crime," Sepehri Far wrote in a post for the Atlantic Council, a think tank, before the revelation of the charges.

The Asiatic cheetah, likely numbering fewer than 50 individuals, is found only in Iran. Image by Tasnim News Agency via Wikimedia Commons (CC 4.0).

She said an investigation at the behest of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani did not find that the accused environmentalists were spies, which put them at the center of a "domestic power struggle" with hard-liners in the judiciary and the Revolutionary Guard.

If convicted, the environmentalists could face sentences ranging from six months up to the death penalty.

"It is hard to fathom how working to preserve the Iranian flora and fauna can possibly be linked to conducting espionage against Iranian interests," a group of experts calling on the Iranian government to have the charges dropped said in a statement from the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Jon Paul Rodríguez, a biologist at the Venezuelan Institute for Scientific Research and chair of IUCN Species Survival Commission, highlighted the value of the work that the researchers had been doing.

"As far as I am aware, practically the only information we have on the Asiatic cheetah comes from camera traps," he said.

Asiatic cheetahs likely number fewer than 50 individuals, based on a 2017 study co-authored by Jowkar, 1 of the people charged in this case, and the IUCN has considered the subspecies critically endangered since 1996.

Because cheetahs live at low densities, the traps represent a much more efficient and economical tool to get an accurate picture of their population. In Botswana in southern Africa, scientists have used camera traps to demonstrate to ranchers that a cheetah on their property isn’t as dangerous to their livestock as they might think.

An Asiatic cheetah in Miandasht Wildlife Refuge in Iran. Image by Behnam Ghorbani via Wikimedia Commons (CC 4.0).

The detentions and the charges leveled have rattled the international scientific community.

"IUCN is deeply alarmed by the charges," Rodríguez said.

First reported by Science, hundreds of scientists have signed a letter asking Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, to ensure a fair and "transparent" trial for the 8 researchers.

CITATION

Khalatbari, L., Jowkar, H., Yusefi, G. H., Brito, J. C., and Ostrowski, S. (2017). The current status of Asiatic cheetah in Iran. Cat News, 66, 10-13.

(source: mongabay.com)








MALDIVES:

Maldives pledges to uphold moratorium on death penalty----The moratorium was lifted by former president Abdulla Yameen in 2014.



A 65-year moratorium on the death penalty will be maintained by the new administration of President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, the foreign ministry announced Tuesday.

It also announced that the Maldives would vote yes on a draft resolution before the UN General Assembly entitled "Moratorium on the Use of the Death Penalty."

The six-decade moratorium on capital punishment was lifted by former president Abdulla Yameen in 2014. However, despite religious campaign rhetoric and offering various dates, his previous administration did not resume executions.

A pledge to uphold the moratorium was also announced Tuesday by the Maldives delegation attending a review by the Committee Against Torture in Geneva, Switzerland.

The delegation led by president's office minister Ahmed Naseem, a former foreign minister, also pledged to criminalise marital rape, end corporal punishment of children and to respect all obligations under the Convention Against Torture.

3 young men are presently on death row after the Supreme Court upheld their sentences.

During the previous administration, rumours of their imminent execution led to international condemnation, including from philanthropist Richard Branson, Indian politician Sashi Tharoor as well as the Islamic scholar Tariq Ramadan.

In July 2016, the UN Human Rights Committee asked the government to halt the execution of Hussain Humam Ahmed pending the outcome of a review of his case. The 22-year-old was found guilty of murdering parliamentarian Dr Afrasheem Ali in October 2012.

According to Maldivian law, the death penalty can only be carried out should all of the murder victim's immediate relatives (heirs) choose to take the life of a convicted killer under the Islamic shariah principle of Qisas (retaliation in kind).

Dr Afrasheem's heirs requested Humam's execution be delayed until the high-profile murder is solved. The inmate may prove to be key in identifying the financiers of the brutal killing, they said.

Agnes Callamard, the UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, had also urged the government to maintain the de facto moratorium on the death penalty, calling the resumption of executions "a great setback for the country and the entire region".

International human rights groups Amnesty International and Reprieve, in a petition against the death penalty in the Maldives said Yameen was putting the country "on the wrong side of history" by this "reckless course of action".

(source: Maldives Independent)








MALAYSIA:

Carwash worker sentenced to death for drug trafficking in Johor



A carwash worker was sentenced to death by the High Court here for distributing 99.16g of methamphetamine 2 years ago.

Judge Collin Lawrence Sequerah meted out the sentence on Wednesday (Nov 28) to S. Satha Sivam, 44, after the defence failed to raise a reasonable doubt in the case.

According to the charge sheet, the accused was charged with distributing the drugs in a room located on the top floor of a coffee shop in Jalan Meldrum at about 7.40pm on Sept 9, 2016.

Satha's lawyer Nur Zafirah Norizan said her client appealed to be jailed instead of being sent to the gallows.

Amendments to Section 39B of the Dangerous Drugs Act 1952 removes the mandatory death penalty for drug offences and gives judges full discretion in sentencing.

However, in his judgement, Sequerah said the accused had not fulfilled the compulsory condition for him to escape the death penalty.

DPP Nor Farhana Adham prosecuted.

(source: thestar.com.my)

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

Liew: Govt committed to doing away with death penalty



The death penalty is not an answer to everything as there is no credible proof that it deters crimes, says de facto law minister Liew Vui Keong.

In his speech during the dialogue session, "Abolition of Death Penalty: Way Forward", with the United Kingdom and Eire Malaysian Law Student's Union at the Malaysian High Commission in London on Saturday, Liew said the people should instead move towards becoming a humane society because hanging as punishment for causing a death is never the solution.

"As of Oct 29 this year, there are 65,222 prisoners and 1,281 of them are death row inmates.

"However, just one week before that, there were 59,997 prisoners and 1,279 death row inmates. So, there is an increase of 5,225 prisoners and 2 death row inmates in a span of just 1 week," he said.

A text of his speech was released here.

Liew, who headed the Malaysian delegation for the 11th International Meeting of Justice Ministers on "A World Without the Death Penalty" conference, from Nov 26 to Dec 1 in Italy, had made a stopover in London where he met the Malaysian university students.

He said the issue behind the country taking away a human life would always be a hot button issue and everyone has an opinion on this.

Liew said the government is committed to abolishing the death penalty.

"After the Cabinet decision made on Oct 10, I made an announcement that the death penalty in all laws in this country will be abolished. Coincidentally, the 'World Day Against the Death Penalty' also falls on the same day," he said.

To date, he said, there are 32 offences under 8 laws which are punishable with the death penalty.

They include the Penal Code, Strategic Trade Act 2010, Arms Act 1960, Firearms (Increased Penalties) Act 1971, Armed Forces Act 1972, Dangerous Drugs Act 1952, Kidnapping Act 1961 and Water Services Industry Act 2006.

Miscarriage of justice

Liew said there was always the possibility of miscarriage of justice when imposing the death penalty.

For example, he said in 2017, a 20-year-old South Korean student, charged in the Seremban High Court for drug trafficking and facing the death penalty, was freed after a police officer, who was the most crucial witness in the case, admitted to lying during the trial.

"It is said that it's better that 10 guilty men go free than 1 innocent man be wrongly convicted," said Liew.

"If an innocent men is sentenced to death, it means that the guilty one is still at large.

"Of course, all these facts are not meant to disregard the feelings of the victims and their family members."

Liew said the government intends to replace the death penalty with imprisonment for life.

"I fully understand the pain and suffering of those who have lost their loved ones but life has to go on. It’s never easy to let go of the bitterness," he said.

"I am proposing a mandatory imprisonment for life for those who have been convicted for heinous crimes without the possibility of parole."

(source: freemalaysiatoday.com)








INDIA:

SC upholds validity of death sentence for murder



The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the validity of the death sentence for murder under penal law while it commuted to life imprisonment the death sentence of one Channnu Lal Verma.

The bench of Justice Kurian Joseph, Justice Deepak Gupta and Justice Hemant Gupta upheld the penal provision of death sentence under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) by a majority of 2:1.

While Justice Deepak Gupta and Justice Hemant Gupta upheld the penal provision of death sentence under Section 302 of IPC, Justice Joseph differed, seeking a review of capital punishment as it has failed to be a deterrent to curb the heinous crime.

Justice Joseph, who is retiring on Thursday, has cited the 262 report of the Law Commission which has said that death penalty has failed to be a deterrent to curb the heinous crime.

However, Justice Deepak Gupta, also speaking for Justice Hemant Gupta, defended the retention of the death penalty on the statute book. The majority judgment referred to earlier judgments of the top court in Bachan Singh and Machhi Singh case, upholding the validity of capital punishment.

He said there was no need for re-examining the validity and correctness of the death sentence.

Section 302 of the IPC that provides for punishment for murder says: "Whoever commits murder shall be punished with death or imprisonment for life, and shall also be liable to fine."

Justice Joseph, in his minority judgment, said that trial court proceedings at times get impacted by public opinion and even the investigating agencies mount pressure for the conviction of the accused.

The top court had earlier, in the Delhi gang rape case, upheld the validity of the death sentence, and in the Bachan Singh's case in the 1980s, the top court had coined the doctrine of "rarest of rare" case for the award of the death sentence.

In the current case, three judges, while pronouncing a split verdict on the validity of the death sentence as punishment, commuted the death sentence of one Channnu Lal Verma of Chhattisgarh who was convicted and awarded the death sentence by the trial court and the same was upheld by the High Court.

Verma was convicted for the murder of 3 people who had appeared as witnesses against him in an alleged rape case. He was acquitted in the rape case.

He had murdered one 25-year-old Ratna Bai, her father-in-law Ram Sahu and mother-in-law Firtin Bai.

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

SC commutes death to life imprisonment to rape, murder case convict



The Supreme Court on Wednesday commuted death sentence to life imprisonment to a man who was convicted in a rape and triple murder case, after noting that death penalty is awarded only in those cases where there is no chance of a convict's reform.

A 3-judge bench of the apex court, headed by Justice Kurian Joseph, and comprising Justices Hemant Gupta and Deepak Gupta, commuted the death sentence of Chhannu Lal Verma to life imprisonment.

The court did not agree with the submissions made by Atul Jha, standing counsel of Chhattisgarh, stating that there was no evidence to show that he (Verma) was beyond reform, adding that life term will prove to be an inadequate punishment for his crime.

Verma was convicted by a Sessions Court and then by the Chhattisgarh High Court for killing Anand Ram Sahu, his wife Firanteen Bai and raping and murdering their daughter-in-law Ratna Sahu in 2011, and was subsequently awarded a death penalty.

Jha had submitted to the apex court that Verma, with premeditation and planning, committed house trespass and assaulted Anand Ram, Firanteen and Ratna Sahu. He had submitted to the apex court that the evidence on record and testimonies of different witnesses clearly establish that there was precision and all the targets were well planned by Verma.

He further submitted that the accused crossed all limits of brutality and was in such mental state where he was not thinking of any other situation but to kill the persons belonging to the family of Ratna Bai.

Jha had submitted that the appellant (Verma) had previous criminal antecedents involving the same family. Therefore, it is a case where he failed to reform himself on more than one occasion, he noted.

Verma, in his defence, submitted that the conviction was based on the testimony of a child eyewitness, and thereby, should not be relied upon.

(source for both: business-standard.com)



BELARUS----executions

Belarus Executes 2 Convicted Murderers, Prompting EU Criticism

Belarus has executed 2 convicted murderers, the human rights group Vyasna (Spring) said, prompting the European Union to redouble its calls for President Alyaksandr Lukashenka's government to impose a moratorium on capital punishment.

Vyasna cited the mother of Ihar Hershankou as saying on November 28 that she had been officially informed that the death penalty imposed on her son had been carried out.

A day earlier, Vyasna cited relatives of Syamyon Berazhny as saying that they had been informed that the 31-year-old had been executed by shooting.

Belarus is the only country in Europe and the former Soviet Union that executes prisoners, drawing persistent criticism from rights activists and EU nations.

Berazhny, Hershankou, and two co-defendants were convicted of murder and kidnapping in July 2017, after investigators said they were members of a gang that killed elderly homeowners in order to acquire their apartments or houses.

Berazhny and one of his co-defendants, Ihar Hershankou, were sentenced to death and the other 2 were sentenced to 22 and 24 years in prison.

In June, the Supreme Court suspended the implementation of the death sentences against Berazhny and Hershankou amid calls by rights organizations not to execute the men.

Amnesty International, which had earlier raised concerns about the planned executions, praised the Supreme Court decision at the time.

The EU and rights groups have urged Belarus for years to join other countries in a moratorium on the death penalty.

A spokeswoman for EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said that "the European Union reaffirms its strong and unequivocal opposition to capital punishment in all circumstances."

"The death penalty violates the inalienable right to life enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and is a cruel, inhuman, and degrading punishment," spokeswoman Maja Kocijancic said in a statement.

She called on Minsk "to introduce a moratorium on the use of the death penalty as a first step towards its abolition."

"Tangible steps taken by Belarus to respect universal human rights, including on the death penalty, will remain key for shaping the EU's future policy towards Belarus," Kocijancic's statement said.

According to rights organizations, more than 400 people have been sentenced to death in Belarus since it gained independence after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

2 convicts were reportedly executed in May.

Kocijancic's statement said that four executions have been carried out in Belarus in 2018 and 2 people remain on death row.

(source: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty)








EGYPT:

Egyptian Kangaroo Courts on death sentences spree



An Egyptian Kangaroo Court Sunday (Nov. 25, 2018) confirmed the penalty after being convicted in the death of Hisham Barakat, who was killed in a car bombing in eastern Cairo in 2015, according to the official MENA news agency.

The son of senior Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Taha Wahdan was among those condemned to death.

There have been no credible claims of responsibility for the deadly bombing that killed the state prosecutor just outside his house. However, the authorities point the finger at members of Egypt’s outlawed Muslim Brotherhood movement.

Barakat was responsible for thousands of controversial prosecutions, including several widely deemed as politically-motivated resulting in death sentences, for hundreds of members of the movement.

The Egyptian government has been cracking down on opposition since the country's 1st democratically-elected president, Mohamed Morsi, was ousted in a military coup led by General and current President Field Marshal Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in July 2013.

Hundreds of Morsi supporters have been sentenced to death, while the former president and top Brotherhood figures have also faced trial.

Human Rights groups say the army's clampdown on the supporters of Morsi has led to the deaths of over 1,400 people and the arrest of 22,000 others, including some 200 people who have been sentenced to death in mass trials.

Following the coup, Cairo also labeled the Muslim Brotherhood as a "terrorist organization" in December 2013 and Egyptian courts have sentenced hundreds of Brotherhood members to death, including Morsi himself.

Egyptian military junta led by US-client Field Marshall Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, has executed 32 people since al-Sisi overthrew the first democratically elected President Mohamed Morsi in July 2013.

According to the New Khaleej, Egyptian authorities have executed 32 people in nine cases since the coup d'e'tat while 64 people are awaiting the death penalty in 13 other cases.

There is no precise count of the number of death sentences pending appeals in Egypt, however human rights organizations say they amount to hundreds.

Since 2013, Egyptian courts have sentenced hundreds to death, with most of the sentences appealed, while few were carried out.

Egypt upholds death sentence against 80-year-old Quran tutor

The Egyptian government has upheld a death sentence against Sheikh Abdel Halim Gabreel, an 80-year-old Quran tutor, with Amnesty International campaigning for him to receive a presidential pardon.

On 24 September, Egypt’s Court of Cassation upheld the death sentences of 20 Egyptians, including Gabreel, who had been convicted of killing 13 policemen during a 2013 attack on a police station in the Giza suburb of Kerdasa in 2013.

Gabreel was arrested while he was in the mosque and was put on trial after six months of investigations, all whilst he was denied a lawyer. Despite not having any political affiliation and stating that he was not involved in the Kerdasa attack, with 2 witnesses for the prosecution affirming his story, he was sentenced to death.

Some 156 defendants were also either sentenced to death or to lengthy imprisonment in the first trial, for their alleged involvement in the "Kerdasa Massacre" in which 13 police officers were killed.

The 80-year-old grandfather's health has deteriorated in prison since his detention; he has received inadequate treatment for his psoriasis and cannot walk long distances. Wadi Al-Natrun prison authorities have also prevented his family from bringing him medication.

The latest ruling by the Court of Cassation cannot be appealed. Amnesty has consequently called on the international community to write letters to Egyptian President Field Marshal Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi and the country's public prosecutor, urging for Gabreel to be granted a presidential pardon and that he is given regular and adequate access to qualified medical professionals.

They also urge Egyptian authorities "to halt any planned executions, to commute all existing death sentences and immediately establish an official moratorium on executions, with a view to abolishing the death penalty".

According to Amnesty, since the ousting of democratically elected President Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, Egyptian civil and military courts issued more than 1,400 death sentences, mostly related to incidents of political violence, following grossly unfair trials, with testimonies often obtained through torture.

The global human rights watchdog has described the situation in Egypt as the worst human rights crisis in the country in decades, with the state systematically using arbitrary arrests and enforced disappearances to silence any criticism of the government. Hundreds of journalists and human rights activists have also been arrested and held without trial.

Egypt has justified its crackdown on opponents as necessary to protect national security. Last year, President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi told US officials in New York that human rights should not be judged from a Western perspective, arguing that Egypt had taken numerous measures to ensure the economic and social wellbeing of its citizens.

(source: Abdus Sattar Ghazali is the Chief Editor of the Journal of America; The Milli Gazette)








CAMEROON:

Cameroonian Separatists Risk Death Sentence Following Terrorism Charges



10 Cameroonian separatist leaders extradited from Nigeria earlier this year will face trial next month on terrorism charges that could lead to the death penalty, one of their lawyers said after a court hearing on Tuesday.

The accused include Julius Ayuk Tabe, the leader of an Anglophone separatist movement in western Cameroon fighting to break away from the Francophone-dominated central government.

Hundreds of people, including civilians, separatist fighters and Cameroonian security agents, have been killed in the past year's violence, which has emerged as the most serious security threat to President Paul Biya, in power for 36 years.

"Ten charges have been brought against them, including terrorism, advocating terrorism, secession, civil war and revolution," lawyer Christopher Ndong told Reuters after the charges were read out at the capital Yaounde's military court.

The trial is scheduled to begin on Dec. 6, Ndong added.

Tabe and his co-defendants were among 47 Anglophone Cameroonians arrested in Nigeria and deported to Cameroon in January. The remaining 37 suspects are still being held by the authorities and have not been charged, said Ndong.

Cameroon's government spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

A separatist insurgency gained pace in 2017 following a government crackdown on peaceful protests by Anglophones, who complain of being marginalized by the French-speaking majority.

Violence from both sides of the conflict intensified this year, forcing thousands of civilians to seek refuge in Francophone regions.

Biya, re-elected to a seventh term in October, said in his inauguration speech last month the separatists must lay down their arms or face the full force of the law.

Cameroon regularly sentences people to death but has not carried out an execution in years.

(source: voanews.com)








ZIMBABWE:

Man who beheaded wife with axe gets death sentence



The Supreme Court yesterday confirmed the death sentence on a Binga man who axed his wife 11 times and chopped off her head before hiding it in a cardboard box following a domestic dispute.

Wonder Munsaka (33) of Zenka Village under Chief Siabuwa was last year convicted of murder with actual intent by Bulawayo High Court Justice Nokuthula Moyo and sentenced to death by hanging.

Munsaka axed his wife of 10 years, Fortunate Mutale (23) on the forehead, right palm and finger before chopping off the head in October 2014.

Supreme Court judge Justice Antonia Guvava sitting with Justices Rita Makarau and Francis Bere on circuit in Bulawayo dismissed his appeal, saying the bench was satisfied that Justice Moyo could not be faulted for passing a death sentence given the circumstances under which the offence was committed.

"The assault upon the deceased was vicious and protracted and the injuries were inflicted by the axe and directed at her head. The appellant struck the deceased no less than 11 times," said Justice Guvava.

She said Munsaka's version of events was contradictory, an indication that he changed his story as the trial progressed Justice Guvava said Justice Moyo's exercise of discretion to impose the death penalty in the circumstances could not be impugned since the murder was committed in aggravating circumstances.

"The murder was committed in aggravating circumstances. Accordingly, we are of the unanimous decision that the appeal both against conviction and sentence lacks merit and it is hereby dismissed," she ruled.

Munsaka, through his lawyers Shenje and Company, conceded that the conviction was proper. He however, sought an order for a life imprisonment, arguing that the sentence imposed by the High Court induced a sense of shock.

"Wherefore, the appellant seeks to impugn his sentence and pray that it be set aside and substituted with a sentence of life imprisonment," said Munsaka's lawyers.

Chief Public Prosecutor Mrs Tariro Rosa Takuva, in her head of argument, said the death sentence was proper since the murder was committed under aggravating circumstances.

"It is common cause that the murder was accompanied by mutilation when the appellant relentlessly struck the deceased with an axe to the point of decapitating her head. The murder was committed in aggravating circumstances and the death sentence is therefore appropriate in the circumstances," she argued.

According to State papers, on October 7 in 2014 at around 9PM, Munsaka and his wife had a domestic dispute at their matrimonial homestead.

He got angry and struck his wife using an axe once on the forehead, right palm and finger and behind the right ear. Munsaka also struck her on the upper lip and nose.

During the scuffle, Mutale bolted out of the kitchen screaming for help with her husband in hot pursuit.

She fell down and Munsaka chopped off her head with the axe. He put the head in a large cardboard box and hid it under their bed.

After committing the crime, he went to Nabusenga Dam where he washed his blood-stained clothes and the axe.

Ms Agnes Mutale, a neighbour who heard the deceased screaming for help went to Munsaka's grandmother, Ms Mavu Mwinde's homestead and notified her.

Ms Mwinde went to her grandson's place and found the deceased's body lying in a pool of blood in an open space in the yard and the head was missing.

A report was made to the police who combed the house and found the head hidden under the bed.

According to post mortem results, the cause of death was spinal cord injury, decapitation, chop wound and homicide.

Munsaka took his 2 minor children to his parents' home where he intended to leave them before he could proceed to Zambia. However, when he returned he found neighbours and the police officers gathered at his homestead. He tried to flee but was apprehended by the police officers.

Prior to the trial, Munsaka in 2014 claimed that he was mentally unstable prompting the courts to send him to psychiatrists for examinations.

Dr Nemache Mawere, a psychiatrist who examined Munsaka concluded that he was mentally stable.

(source: bulawayo24.com)








ZAMBIA:

President Lungu has commuted more death penalties to life imprisonment than any Zambian President-Lubinda



President Edgar Lungu has commuted more death penalties to life imprisonment than any other serving Zambian President.

Justice Minister Given Lubinda said this decision not to sign death penalties has earned Zambia's reputation internationally as an abolitionist country with regards to implementing the death penalty.

Mr. Lubinda was speaking in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia yesterday when he transited to Rome to attend a conference on the 10th Anniversary of the campaign against the death penalty by an organisation called St. Egidio.

He said Zambia had gone further to vote in the affirmative at the United Nations - UN- on maintenance of a moratorium of the death penalty.

Mr. Lubinda said President Lungu made the bold decision in 2016 to allow the Embassy of the Republic of the Republic of Zambia in New York to start voting in the affirmative after having abstained from voting on the moratorium for years.

He said despite the death Penalty still being upheld in the constitution, no President has signed the death penalty since 1998.

Mr.Lubinda clarified that unlike other laws that can easily be amended; the death penalty was part of the bill of rights that could only be amended through a referendum.

And the Minister said Zambia has adequate laws to guarantee the safety of investors in the country.

He said it was unfortunate that some Zambians where taking the law in their own hands by attacking foreigners who had come in the country to invest.

Mr. Lubinda said the recent xenophobic attacks on the Chinese where unfortunate and urged Zambia to use better channels in channelling their grievances.

The Minister further said Zambia should resist the temptation of being used in what he termed an economic conflict against the Chinese.

He said it was unfortunate that some political leaders including parliamentarians where inciting Zambians to rise against government's decision to engage the Chinese in some developmental projects.

The Minister was received at Bole International Airport by Ministry of Justice Permanent Secretary, Andrew Nkunika and Zambia's Ambassador to Ethiopia, Ms. Susan Sikaneta.

(source: Lusaka Times)
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