Death penalty 2011: Alarming levels of executions in the few countries that kill
AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
Press
Release
STRICT
EMBARGO: 00:01 GMT Tuesday 27
March 2012
Countries
that carried out executions in 2011 did so at an alarming rate but those employing
capital punishment have decreased by more than a third compared to a decade
ago, Amnesty International found in its annual review of death sentences and
executions.
Only
10 percent of countries in the world, 20 out of 198, carried out executions last
year.
People
were executed or sentenced to death for a range of offences including adultery
and sodomy in Iran,
blasphemy in Pakistan,
sorcery in Saudi Arabia, the
trafficking of human bones in the Republic
of Congo, and drug
offences in more than 10 countries.
Methods
of execution in 2011 included beheading, hanging, lethal injection and
shooting.
Some
18,750 people remained under sentence of death at the end of 2011 and at least
676 people were executed worldwide.
But
these figures do not include the thousands of executions that Amnesty
International believes were carried out in China, where the numbers are
suppressed.
Nor
do they account for the probable extent of Iran’s use of the death penalty –
Amnesty International has had credible reports of substantial numbers of
executions not officially acknowledged.
“The
vast majority of countries have moved away from using the death penalty,” said
Salil Shetty Secretary General of Amnesty International.
“Our
message to the leaders of the isolated minority of countries that continue to
execute is clear: you are out of step with the rest of the world on this issue
and it is time you took steps to end this most cruel, inhuman and degrading
punishment. “
In
the Middle East there has been a steep rise in
recorded executions – up almost 50 per cent on the previous year.
This
was due to four countries – Iraq
(at least 68 executions), Iran
(at least 360), Saudi Arabia
(at least 82) and Yemen (at
least 41) – which accounted for 99 per cent of all recorded executions in the
Middle East and North Africa. The rise in Iran and Saudi Arabia alone accounted for
the net increase in recorded executions across the world of 149, compared to
2010.
Thousands
of people were executed in China
in 2011, more than the rest of the world put together. Figures on the death
penalty are a state secret. Amnesty International has stopped publishing
figures it collects from public sources in China as these are likely to
grossly underestimate the true number.
The
organization renewed its challenge to the Chinese authorities to publish data
on those executed and sentenced to death, in order to confirm their claims that
ious changes in law and practice have led to a significant reduction in the
use of the death penalty in the country over the last four years.
In
Iran,
Amnesty International received credible reports of a large number of
unconfirmed or even secret executions which would almost double the levels
officially acknowledged.
At
least three people were executed in Iran for crimes that were committed
when they were under 18 years of age, in violation of international law. A
further four unconfirmed executions of juvenile offenders were reported there,
and one in Saudi Arabia.
The
United States was again the
only country in the Americas
and the only member of the G8 group of leading economies to execute prisoners –
43 in 2011. Europe and former Soviet Union countries were capital
punishment-free, apart from Belarus
where two people were executed. The
Pacific was death penalty-free except for five death sentences in Papua New Guinea.
In
Belarus and Vietnam,
prisoners were not informed of their forthcoming execution, nor were their
families or lawyers. Public judicial executions were known to have been carried
out in North Korea, Saudi Arabia and Somalia,
as well as in Iran.
In
the majority of countries where people were sentenced to death or executed, the
trials did not meet international fair trial standards. In some, this involved
the extraction of ‘confessions’ through torture or other duress including in China, Iran,
Iraq, North Korea, and Saudi Arabia.
Foreign
nationals were disproportionately affected by the use of the death penalty,
particularly in Saudi Arabia,
Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand.
But
even in those countries that continue to execute on a high level some progress
was made in 2011.
In
China, the government eliminated the death penalty for 13 mainly ‘white collar’
crimes, and measures were also put forward to the National People’s Congress to
reduce the number of cases of torture in detention, strengthen the role of
defence lawyers and ensure suspects in capital cases are represented by a
lawyer.
In
the USA,
the number of executions and new death sentences dropped dramatically from a
decade ago. Illinois
became the 16th state to abolish the death penalty. A moratorium was
announced in the state of Oregon.
And victims of violent crimes spoke out against the death penalty
“Even
among the small group of countries that executed in 2011, we can see gradual
progress. These are small steps but such incremental measures have been shown
ultimately to lead to the end of the death penalty,” said Salil Shetty.
“It
is not going to happen overnight but we are determined that we will see the day
when the death penalty is consigned to history.”
Amnesty
International opposes the death penalty in all cases without exception
regardless of the nature of the crime, the characteristics of the offender or
the method used by the state to carry out the execution. The death penalty
violates the right to life and is the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading
punishment.
Regional summaries
The
Americas
The
US was once again the only
executioner in the Americas.
A total of 43 executions were recorded in 13 of the 34 states that retain the
death penalty, a drop by a third since 2001, and 78 new death sentences were
recorded in 2011, a decrease by half since 2001.
The
Caribbean
An
execution-free area, with the number of countries imposing new death sentences
appearing to be in decline. Only three countries are known to have handed down
a total of six death sentences: Guyana,
Saint Lucia and Trinidad and Tobago.
Asia-Pacific
Positive
signs questioning the legitimacy of capital punishment were evident throughout
the region in 2011. Not counting the thousands of executions that were believed to
have taken place in China,
at least 51 executions were reported to have been carried out in seven
countries in the Asia-Pacific region. At least 833 new death sentences were
known to have been imposed in 18 countries in the region. The
Pacific sub-region was death penalty-free with the exception of five death
sentences handed down in Papua
New Guinea. No
executions were recorded in Singapore
and, for the first time in 19 years, Japan. The authorities in both
countries have previously shown strong support for capital punishment.
Sub-Saharan
Africa
Significant
progress in 2011 - Benin
adopted legislation to ratify the key UN treaty aimed at abolishing the death
penalty. Sierra Leone
declared, and Nigeria
confirmed, official moratoriums on executions. And the Constitutional Review
Commission in Ghana
recommended the abolition of the death penalty. There
were at least 22 executions in three countries in sub-Saharan Africa: Somalia, Sudan
and South Sudan. Only 14 of the 49 countries
in the region are classified as retaining the death penalty.
Middle
East and North Africa
At
least 558 executions could be confirmed in eight countries. At least 750 death
sentences imposed in 2011 could be confirmed in 15 countries. The
continuing violence in countries such as Libya,
Syria and Yemen made it
particularly difficult to gather adequate information on the use of the death
penalty in the region in 2011. No information was available about judicial
executions in Libya,
and no death sentences are known to have been imposed. Extrajudicial
executions, torture and arbitrary detention were often resorted to instead.
Four
countries – Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia
and Yemen – accounted for 99
per cent of all recorded executions in the Middle East and North
Africa.
The
authorities of Algeria, Jordan, Kuwait,
Lebanon, Morocco/Western
Sahara and Qatar
imposed death sentences but continued to refrain from carrying out executions.
Europe
and Central Asia
Belarus was the
only country in Europe and the former Soviet Union, and apart from the USA the only
one in the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), to have
carried out executions in 2011, executing two men.
-ENDS-
Notes to editors
Amnesty
International experts on the death penalty are available for interview.
For more
information, to request an embargo copy of the report and other supporting
media materials including facts and figures, graphics, case studies and a short
animation please contact
Tom
Mackey
Amnesty
International Press Office
+44
207 413 55 66 tom.mackey@amnesty.org @amnestypress
International
Secretariat, Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW,
UK
www.amnesty.org
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