Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Global executions fell by 25 percent in 2003: Amnesty

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Global executions fell by 25 percent in 2003: Amnesty

    Agence France Presse
    April 6, 2004 Tuesday 9:17 AM Eastern Time

    Global executions fell by 25 percent in 2003: Amnesty

    GENEVA, April 6


    The number of people executed in the world fell by 25 percent in 2003
    while more than half the countries have stopped using the death
    penalty, the advocacy group Amnesty International said Tuesday.

    Four countries -- China, Iran, the United States and Vietnam --
    accounted for 84 percent of the 1,143 legally-sanctioned executions
    known to have been carried out in 28 countries last year.

    Nearly two-thirds (726) of the executions took place in China,
    Amnesty said in its annual review on the use of the death penalty.

    During 2002, 1,526 people were known to have been executed in 31
    countries, spokeswoman Judit Arenas told journalists. The human
    rights group is fiercely opposed to capital punishment.

    At least 2,756 people were sentenced to death in 63 countries in
    2003, also marking a sharp fall over the previous year, when the
    human rights group counted 3,248 executions in 67 states.

    The data is based on Amnesty's own research, but does not account for
    possible executions in secretive states such as North Korea, while
    the true figure for some countries, including China, is thought to be
    much higher.

    Armenia, Bhutan, Kazakhstan, Kirghizistan, and Samoa, joined 112
    other countries who have now formally abolished capital punishment or
    have stopped using it for several years.

    "This year's figures show that the majority of countries follow an
    abolitionist path, others choose to remain on the wrong side of the
    justice divide," Amnesty said in a statement.

    China last year reportedly introduced a fleet of 18 mobile execution
    buses in Yunnan province, where condemned people are given a lethal
    injection immediately after they are sentenced by local courts.

    "That has heightened our concern about the way that the death penalty
    is applied in that country, where we believe that judicial review has
    not been allowed given that the time between sentencing and execution
    is only a few hours," Arenas said.

    Amnesty was also sharply critical of the United States, where 65
    executions took place, some of them involving people who committed
    crimes when they were still juveniles or people who were mentally
    ill.
Working...
X