The debate over the death penalty resurfaces in India every time a judgment
on a murder is delivered. There is however very little to the debate, and it
is more about mass hysteria with people all around screaming for blood. It
is as if this is the only form of salvation. All voices and reasoning
against the death penalty is drowned in this shrill, rabid cries for blood.

There is, indeed, very little debate over the issue in India. It is not
debated hotly in Parliament by representatives most of who come from an
electorate which keeps baying for a hanging. Revenge in the birthplace of
Gandhi and Buddha is seen as the only form of justice. Editorials in
newspapers often try to take a balanced position, but their reportage is
skewed. All tacitly endorse and encourage the death penalty. It is
meaningless to talk about television in this context — their kangaroo court
trials are legion. Grimacing anchors and hyperventilating talk show hosts
don't allow for any sane or civilised debates.

Today, October 10, is the World Day Against Death Penalty. It is something
most people would not know of, for this is not promoted by greetings card
manufacturers. No one wishes another person "Happy Day Against Death
Penalty." There are no thought-provoking editorials in newspapers on the
day. Neither does one get to see those now-infamous advertorials disguised
as news, on the subject. There is, after all, no debate on this subject.

More than two-thirds of the countries in the world have now abolished the
death penalty in law or practice. In all, 95 have abolished it for all
crimes, nine had for ordinary crimes, and 35 in practice. The total number
of abolitionist countries in law or practice stands at 139. Only 58
countries have retained it, India being one of them. India is in elite
company here — Afghanistan, China, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, among others. In 2009,
the number of people executed around the world was 2001, according to
Amnesty International. This tally excludes China. Estimates there vary
anything between 1,000 and 10,000. You can choose your number depending on
how much anti-China you are in principle.

There are international standards and treaties. The *Second Optional
Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights*,
aiming at the abolition of the death penalty, adopted by the UN General
Assembly in 1989, is of worldwide scope. It provides for the total abolition
of the death penalty but allows states parties to retain the death penalty
in time of war if they make a reservation to that effect at the time of
ratifying or acceding to the Protocol. Any state which is a party to the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights can become a party to
the Protocol. India is not a party to this Protocol.

The United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution on December 18, 2007,
calling for a worldwide moratorium on executions. The resolution was adopted
by an overwhelming majority of 104 UN member states in favour, 54 countries
against and 29 abstentions. India, needless to say, voted against it.

The death penalty is a manifestation of a culture of violence, and not a
solution. There are innumerable myths surrounding the death penalty debate.
Myths that perpetuate the notion that the death penalty is a must for a safe
society.

*KILLIING BY THE STATE:* Hundreds of protesters hold a vigil outside Alipore
Central Jail, Kolkata, where Dhananjoy Chatterjee was hanged on August 14,
2004. There are alternative punishments to the death penalty which do not
involve the premeditated and coldblooded killing of a human being by the
state in the name of justice. *Photograph:* AP Photo/Bikas Das


Let's look at some of those, very briefly.

   1. *The death penalty deters violent crime and makes society safer.*
   This is the most often quoted argument by death shriekers. The fact is
   evidence proves it to the contrary. In 2004 in the US, the average murder
   rate for states that used the death penalty was 5.71 per 100,000 of the
   population as against 4.02 per 100,000 in states that did not use it. In
   2003 in Canada, 27 years after the country abolished the death penalty the
   murder rate had fallen by 44 per cent since 1975, when capital punishment
   was still enforced. The 2009 FBI Uniform Crime Report showed that the South
   (in the US) had the highest murder rate. The South accounts for over 80 per
   cent of executions. The Northeast, which has less than 1 per cent of all
   executions, again had the lowest murder rate. Numbers don't work out for the
   death seekers.
   2. *Individuals are less likely to commit violent crimes, including
   murder, if they know they will face punishment by execution.*
   This is a puerile argument that assumes that criminals study and
   anticipate the consequences of getting caught, and decide that a long term
   of imprisonment is acceptable, whereas execution is not. It disregards the
   fact that most violent crimes happen at the spur of the moment.
   3. *The threat of execution is an effective strategy in preventing
   terrorism.*
   During times when suicide bombings are in vogue, this contention comes
   across as a joke. Those who take up the terrorist way of communicating
   ideas, don't care a fig about their own safety. Those who carry out such
   operations, work on assumption that death is a certainty. The 9/11
   terrorists killed themselves too, if one remembers correctly. The Mumbai
   attackers inflicted maximum damage, till they were mowed down, or blown up.
   The killers of Indira Gandhi knew there would be no ways of escape, but that
   did not deter them. The murderer of Rajiv Gandhi, in any case, blew herself
   up too.

Some brief Q&As (from an Amnesty International document):

*In opposing the death penalty, isn't Amnesty showing disrespect for victims
of violent crime and their relatives?
*In opposing the death penalty, Amnesty International in no way seeks to
minimize or condone the crimes for which those sentenced to death were
convicted. If it were, then a majority of countries are currently apologists
for violent crime, clearly a nonsensical suggestion. As an organization
deeply concerned with the victims of human rights abuses, Amnesty
International does not seek to belittle the suffering of the families of
murder victims, for whom it has the greatest sympathy. However, the finality
and cruelty inherent in the death penalty render it incompatible with norms
of modern-day, civilized behaviour. It is an inappropriate and unacceptable
response to violent crime.

*But surely there are times when the state has no choice but to take
someone's life?*
Self-defence may be used to justify in some cases the taking of life by
state officials, for example when a country is at war (international or
civil) or when law enforcement officials must act immediately to save their
own lives or those of others. Even in such situations the use of lethal
force is surrounded by internationally accepted legal safeguards to inhibit
abuse. This use of force is aimed at countering the immediate damage
resulting from force used by others. However the death penalty is not an act
of self-defence against an immediate threat to life. It is the premeditated
killing of a prisoner who could therefore be dealt with equally well by less
harsh means.

*Isn't it necessary to execute certain prisoners in order to prevent them
from repeating their crimes?*
The death penalty as a method of preventing prisoners from re-offending is a
blunt tool. By its very nature, the death penalty can only be carried out
against a prisoner who is already imprisoned and therefore removed from
society. Since that prisoner can no longer commit acts of violence against
society, the death penalty is not needed as a method of protection. Unlike
imprisonment, the death penalty entails the risk of judicial errors which
can never be corrected. There will always be a risk that some prisoners who
are innocent will be executed. The death penalty will not prevent them from
repeating a crime which they did not commit in the first place.

*Surely a person who commits an horrendous crime or who kills another
individual deserves to die?*
An execution cannot be used to condemn killing. Such an act by the state is
the mirror image of the criminal's willingness to use physical violence
against a victim. Additionally, all criminal justice systems are vulnerable
to discrimination and error. No system is or could conceivably be capable of
deciding fairly, consistently and infallibly who should live and who should
die. Expediency, discretionary decisions and prevailing public opinion may
influence the proceedings from the initial arrest to the last-minute
decision on clemency. Central to human rights is that they are inalienable —
they are accorded equally to every individual regardless of their status,
ethnicity, religion or origin. They may not be taken away from anyone
regardless of the crimes a person has committed. Human rights apply to the
worst of us as well as to the best of us, which is why they are there to
protect all of us. They save us from ourselves.

*How can states abolish the death penalty when the majority of public
opinion is in favour of it?*
The reasons for a seemingly strong public support for the death penalty can
be complex and lacking in factual foundation. If the public were fully
informed of the reality of the death penalty and how it is applied, many
people might be more willing to accept abolition. Opinion polls which often
seem to indicate overwhelming support for the death penalty tend to simplify
the complexities of public opinion and the extent to which it is based on an
accurate understanding of the crime situation in the country, its causes and
the means available for combating it. Public support for the death penalty
is most often based on the erroneous belief that it is an effective measure
against crime. What the public overwhelmingly want is truly effective
measures to reduce criminality. If politicians advocate the death penalty as
an anti-crime measure, the public will request it in the belief that it will
address the problem. It is the responsibility of governments to address
criminality effectively and without resorting to abusing human rights via
the death penalty.

India has not seen an execution since 2004. But there are a number of people
on the death row. The total number of prisoners in Indian jails who have
been awarded the death sentence stands at 345 (till December 31, 2008). It
is time India took a call, and abolished the primeval practice.

The death penalty is the ultimate denial of human rights. It has no place in
a civilised society. And it is time for India to act civilised as a
collective.
http://www.write2kill.in/critiques/justice/481.html
-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

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