"Ronald Helm" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


GENEVA -- The United States has been accused of unfair, arbitrary and
racist use of the death penalty by a U.N. special investigator in a
report at a meeting of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights.
Overriding U.S. objections, the commission voted last week for the
second year in a row to call for a worldwide moratorium on executions.
The author of the U.N. report, Bacre Waly Ndiaye, a lawyer from Senegal,
wrote that "race, ethnic origin and economic status appear to be key
determinants of who will, and who will not, receive a sentence of death"
in the United States. The report was presented to the commission last
week.
Ndiaye is an independent expert appointed by the commission to
investigate extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions worldwide.
He traveled in the United States from Sept. 21 to Oct. 8 last year and
based his findings on meetings with federal officials and officials in
New York, Florida, Texas and California, and on visits to death rows.
In the 65-page report, Ndiaye said he found "a significant degree of
unfairness and arbitrariness" in the death penalty's use. Considerations
aside from the crime itself often influence whether the death sentence
is imposed, he said, contending that such considerations include the
race and economic level of both the victim and the accused. Ndiaye urged
that the United States stop executions at least until it can ensure fair
and impartial application.
He rejected the argument that there is broad public support for capital
punishment in the United States. "In many countries, mob killings and
lynchings enjoy public support as a way to deal with violent crime and
are often portrayed as 'popular justice,"' he wrote. "Yet they are not
acceptable in any civilized society."
He said that "allegations of racial discrimination in the imposition of
death sentences are particularly serious in southern states such as
Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia and Texas, known as
the 'death penalty belt."'
Some federal and state officials refused to see him during his visit.
Jesse Helms, R-N.C., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
called the mission an "absurd U.N. charade," and urged the State
Department not to cooperate. He made his comments in an angry letter to
the chief U.S. delegate to the United Nations, Bill Richardson, who
later commented that the report would only "collect a lot of dust."
Ndiaye's report was issued late Friday, just before the commission voted
26-13, with others abstaining, to continue its call for a general
moratorium on executions, with the goal of eventually abolishing them
globally.
The commission has 53 delegate nations at any one time, with a system of
rotating three-year terms.
In addition to the United States, the opponents included China, Congo
and Sudan. George Moose, the U.S. delegate to the United Nations in
Geneva, defended each country's right "to decide this issue through its
own democratic process."
"We believe that in a democratic society, the criminal-justice system,
including the punishments prescribed for the most serious crimes, should
reflect the will of the people freely expressed and appropriately
implemented," Moose said at the commission meeting.
Despite the commission's vote, many countries retain the penalty. A
recent report by the U.N. secretary-general says that 90 countries have
capital punishment, while 61 have formally abolished it.
But while the number of countries doing away with the death sentence has
been increasing, the United States has greatly extended its use, since
it was reinstated in 1976, particularly to punish federal crimes, Ndiaye
said.
The United States, Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen are
the only countries where offenders under age 18 can be executed, the
report said, adding that this violates international law.
Executing mentally handicapped defendants, a practice allowed in 28 of
the 38 American states that have capital punishment, is a breach of
international standards, the report said.

Food for thought.  Ron

 99 percent of lawyers give the rest a bad name.
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