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Capital punishment

Capital punishment, also known as the death penalty and formerly called judicial homicide,[1][2] is the state-sanctioned practice of deliberately killing a person as a punishment for an actual or supposed crime, usually following an authorized, rule-governed process to conclude that the person is responsible for violating norms that warrant said punishment.[3] The sentence ordering that an offender be punished in such a manner is known as a death sentence, and the act of carrying out the sentence is known as an execution. A prisoner who has been sentenced to death and awaits execution is condemned and is commonly referred to as being "on death row".

Crimes that are punishable by death are known as capital crimes, capital offences, or capital felonies, and vary depending on the jurisdiction, but commonly include serious crimes against the person, such as murder, mass murder, aggravated cases of rape (often including child sexual abuse), terrorism, aircraft hijacking, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide, along with crimes against the state such as attempting to overthrow government, treason, espionage, sedition, and piracy, among other crimes. Also, in some cases, acts of recidivism, aggravated robbery, and kidnapping, in addition to drug trafficking, drug dealing, and drug possession, are capital crimes or enhancements. However, states have also imposed punitive executions, for an expansive range of conduct, for political or religious beliefs and practices, for a status beyond one's control, or without employing any significant due process procedures.[3] Judicial murder is the intentional and premeditated killing of an innocent person by means of capital punishment.[4] For example, the executions following the show trials in Russia during the Great Purge of 1937–1938 were an instrument of political repression.

Etymologically, the term capital (lit. "of the head", derived via the Latin capitalis from caput, "head") refers to execution by beheading,[5] but executions are carried out by many methods, including hanging, shooting, lethal injection, stoning, electrocution, and gassing.

As of 2022, 55 countries retain capital punishment, 109 countries have completely abolished it de jure for all crimes, seven have abolished it for ordinary crimes (while maintaining it for special circumstances such as war crimes), and 24 are abolitionist in practice.[6][7] Although the majority of nations have abolished capital punishment, over 60% of the world's population live in countries where the death penalty is retained, such as China, India, the United States, Singapore, Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Japan, and Taiwan.[8][9][10][11][12]

Capital punishment is controversial in several countries and states, and positions can vary within a single political ideology or cultural region. Amnesty International declares that the death penalty breaches human rights, stating "the right to life and the right to live free from torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment."[13] These rights are protected under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted by the United Nations in 1948.[13] In the European Union (EU), Article 2 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union prohibits the use of capital punishment.[14] The Council of Europe, which has 46 member states, has sought to abolish the use of the death penalty by its members absolutely, through Protocol 13 of the European Convention on Human Rights. However, this only affects those member states which have signed and ratified it, and they do not include Armenia and Azerbaijan. The United Nations General Assembly has adopted, throughout the years from 2007 to 2020,[15] eight non-binding resolutions calling for a global moratorium on executions, with a view to eventual abolition.[16]

History

 
Anarchist Auguste Vaillant about to be guillotined in France in 1894

Execution of criminals and dissidents has been used by nearly all societies since the beginning of civilizations on Earth.[17] Until the nineteenth century, without developed prison systems, there was frequently no workable alternative to ensure deterrence and incapacitation of criminals.[18] In pre-modern times the executions themselves often involved torture with cruel and painful methods, such as the breaking wheel, keelhauling, sawing, hanging, drawing, and quartering, burning at the stake, flaying, slow slicing, boiling alive, impalement, mazzatello, blowing from a gun, schwedentrunk, and scaphism. Other methods which appear only in legend include the blood eagle and brazen bull.

The use of formal execution extends to the beginning of recorded history. Most historical records and various primitive tribal practices indicate that the death penalty was a part of their justice system. Communal punishments for wrongdoing generally included blood money compensation by the wrongdoer, corporal punishment, shunning, banishment and execution. In tribal societies, compensation and shunning were often considered enough as a form of justice.[19] The response to crimes committed by neighbouring tribes, clans or communities included a formal apology, compensation, blood feuds, and tribal warfare.

A blood feud or vendetta occurs when arbitration between families or tribes fails or an arbitration system is non-existent. This form of justice was common before the emergence of an arbitration system based on state or organized religion. It may result from crime, land disputes or a code of honour. "Acts of retaliation underscore the ability of the social collective to defend itself and demonstrate to enemies (as well as potential allies) that injury to property, rights, or the person will not go unpunished."[20]

In most countries that practise capital punishment, it is now reserved for murder, terrorism, war crimes, espionage, treason, or as part of military justice. In some countries sexual crimes, such as rape, fornication, adultery, incest, sodomy, and bestiality carry the death penalty, as do religious crimes such as Hudud, Zina, and Qisas crimes, such as apostasy (formal renunciation of the state religion), blasphemy, moharebeh, hirabah, Fasad, Mofsed-e-filarz and witchcraft. In many countries that use the death penalty, drug trafficking and often drug possession is also a capital offence. In China, human trafficking and serious cases of corruption and financial crimes are punished by the death penalty. In militaries around the world courts-martial have imposed death sentences for offences such as cowardice, desertion, insubordination, and mutiny.[21]

Ancient history

 
The Christian Martyrs' Last Prayer, by Jean-Léon Gérôme (1883). Roman Circus Maximus.

Elaborations of tribal arbitration of feuds included peace settlements often done in a religious context and compensation system. Compensation was based on the principle of substitution which might include material (for example, cattle, slaves, land) compensation, exchange of brides or grooms, or payment of the blood debt. Settlement rules could allow for animal blood to replace human blood, or transfers of property or blood money or in some case an offer of a person for execution. The person offered for execution did not have to be an original perpetrator of the crime because the social system was based on tribes and clans, not individuals. Blood feuds could be regulated at meetings, such as the Norsemen things.[22] Systems deriving from blood feuds may survive alongside more advanced legal systems or be given recognition by courts (for example, trial by combat or blood money). One of the more modern refinements of the blood feud is the duel.

In certain parts of the world, nations in the form of ancient republics, monarchies or tribal oligarchies emerged. These nations were often united by common linguistic, religious or family ties. Moreover, expansion of these nations often occurred by conquest of neighbouring tribes or nations. Consequently, various classes of royalty, nobility, various commoners and slaves emerged. Accordingly, the systems of tribal arbitration were submerged into a more unified system of justice which formalized the relation between the different "social classes" rather than "tribes". The earliest and most famous example is Code of Hammurabi which set the different punishment and compensation, according to the different class or group of victims and perpetrators. The Torah/Old Testament lays down the death penalty for murder,[23] kidnapping, practicing magic, violation of the Sabbath, blasphemy, and a wide range of sexual crimes, although evidence suggests that actual executions were exceedingly rare, if they occurred at all.[24]

A further example comes from Ancient Greece, where the Athenian legal system replacing customary oral law was first written down by Draco in about 621 BC: the death penalty was applied for a particularly wide range of crimes, though Solon later repealed Draco's code and published new laws, retaining capital punishment only for intentional homicide, and only with victim's family permission.[25] The word draconian derives from Draco's laws. The Romans also used the death penalty for a wide range of offences.[26]

Ancient Greece

 
The Death of Socrates (1787), in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.

Protagoras (whose thought is reported by Plato) criticizes the principle of revenge, because once the damage is done it cannot be canceled by any action. So, if the death penalty is to be imposed by society, it is only to protect the latter against the criminal or for a dissuasive purpose.[27] "The only right that Protagoras knows is therefore human right, which, established and sanctioned by a sovereign collectivity, identifies itself with positive or the law in force of the city. In fact, it finds its guarantee in the death penalty which threatens all those who do not respect it."[28][29]

Plato, for his part, saw the death penalty as a means of purification, because crimes are a "defilement". Thus in the Laws, he considered necessary the execution of the animal or the destruction of the object which caused the death of a Man by accident. For the murderers, he considered that the act of homicide is not natural and is not fully consented by the criminal. Homicide is thus a disease of the soul, which must be reeducated as much as possible, and, as a last resort, sentence to death if no rehabilitation is possible.[30]

According to Aristotle, for whom free will is proper to man, the citizen is responsible for his acts. If there was a crime, a judge must define the penalty allowing the crime to be annulled by compensating it. This is how pecuniary compensation appeared for criminals the least recalcitrant and whose rehabilitation is deemed possible. But for others, the death penalty is necessary according to Aristotle.[31]

This philosophy aims on the one hand to protect society and on the other hand to compensate to cancel the consequences of the crime committed. It inspired Western criminal law until the 17th century, a time when the first reflections on the abolition of the death penalty appeared.[32]

Ancient Rome

In ancient Rome, the application of the death penalty against Roman citizens was unusual and considered exceptional. They preferred alternative sentences ranging, depending on the crime and the criminal, from private or public reprimand to exile, including the confiscation of his property, or torture, or even prison, and as a last resort, death. A historic debate, followed by a vote, took place in the Roman Senate to decide the fate of Catiline's allies when he tried to take power in December −63. Then Roman consul, argued in favor of the killing of conspirators without judgment by decision of the Senate (Senatus consultum ultimum) and was supported by the majority of senators; among the minority voices opposed to the execution, most notable was that of Julius Caesar.[33] The custom was quite different for foreigners who were considered inferior to Roman citizens, and especially for slaves, who were considered transferrable property.

China

Although many are executed in the People's Republic of China each year in the present day,[34] there was a time in the Tang dynasty (618–907) when the death penalty was abolished.[35] This was in the year 747, enacted by Emperor Xuanzong of Tang (r. 712–756). When abolishing the death penalty Xuanzong ordered his officials to refer to the nearest regulation by analogy when sentencing those found guilty of crimes for which the prescribed punishment was execution. Thus depending on the severity of the crime a punishment of severe scourging with the thick rod or of exile to the remote Lingnan region might take the place of capital punishment. However, the death penalty was restored only 12 years later in 759 in response to the An Lushan Rebellion.[36] At this time in the Tang dynasty only the emperor had the authority to sentence criminals to execution. Under Xuanzong capital punishment was relatively infrequent, with only 24 executions in the year 730 and 58 executions in the year 736.[35]

The two most common forms of execution in the Tang dynasty were strangulation and decapitation, which were the prescribed methods of execution for 144 and 89 offences respectively. Strangulation was the prescribed sentence for lodging an accusation against one's parents or grandparents with a magistrate, scheming to kidnap a person and sell them into slavery, and opening a coffin while desecrating a tomb. Decapitation was the method of execution prescribed for more serious crimes such as treason and sedition. Despite the great discomfort involved, most of the Tang Chinese preferred strangulation to decapitation, as a result of the traditional Tang Chinese belief that the body is a gift from the parents and that it is, therefore, disrespectful to one's ancestors to die without returning one's body to the grave intact.

Some further forms of capital punishment were practised in the Tang dynasty, of which the first two that follow at least were extralegal.[clarification needed] The first of these was scourging to death with the thick rod[clarification needed] which was common throughout the Tang dynasty especially in cases of gross corruption. The second was truncation, in which the convicted person was cut in two at the waist with a fodder knife and then left to bleed to death.[37] A further form of execution called Ling Chi (slow slicing), or death by/of a thousand cuts, was used from the close of the Tang dynasty (around 900) to its abolition in 1905.

When a minister of the fifth grade or above received a death sentence the emperor might grant him a special dispensation allowing him to commit suicide in lieu of execution. Even when this privilege was not granted, the law required that the condemned minister be provided with food and ale by his keepers and transported to the execution ground in a cart rather than having to walk there.

Nearly all executions under the Tang dynasty took place in public as a warning to the population. The heads of the executed were displayed on poles or spears. When local authorities decapitated a convicted criminal, the head was boxed and sent to the capital as proof of identity and that the execution had taken place.[37]

Middle Ages

 
The breaking wheel was used during the Middle Ages and was still in use into the 19th century.

In medieval and early modern Europe, before the development of modern prison systems, the death penalty was also used as a generalized form of punishment for even minor offences.[citation needed]

In early modern Europe, a massive moral panic regarding witchcraft swept across Europe and later the European colonies in North America. During this period, there were widespread claims that malevolent Satanic witches were operating as an organized threat to Christendom. As a result, tens of thousands of women were prosecuted for witchcraft and executed through the witch trials of the early modern period (between the 15th and 18th centuries).

 
The burning of Jakob Rohrbach, a leader of the peasants during the German Peasants' War.

The death penalty also targeted sexual offences such as sodomy. In the early history of Islam (7th–11th centuries), there is a number of "purported (but mutually inconsistent) reports" (athar) regarding the punishments of sodomy ordered by some of the early caliphs.[38][39] Abu Bakr, the first caliph of the Rashidun Caliphate, apparently recommended toppling a wall on the culprit, or else burning him alive,[39] while Ali ibn Abi Talib is said to have ordered death by stoning for one sodomite and had another thrown head-first from the top of the highest building in the town; according to Ibn Abbas, the latter punishment must be followed by stoning.[39][40] Other medieval Muslim leaders, such as the Abbasid caliphs in Baghdad (most notably al-Mu'tadid), were often cruel in their punishments.[41][page needed] In early modern England, the Buggery Act 1533 stipulated hanging as punishment for "buggery". James Pratt and John Smith were the last two Englishmen to be executed for sodomy in 1835.[42] In 1636 the laws of Puritan governed Plymouth Colony included a sentence of death for sodomy and buggery.[43] The Massachusetts Bay Colony followed in 1641. Throughout the 19th century, U.S. states repealed death sentences from their sodomy laws, with South Carolina being the last to do so in 1873.[44]

Historians recognize that during the Early Middle Ages, the Christian populations living in the lands invaded by the Arab Muslim armies between the 7th and 10th centuries suffered religious discrimination, religious persecution, religious violence, and martyrdom multiple times at the hands of Arab Muslim officials and rulers.[45][46] As People of the Book, Christians under Muslim rule were subjected to dhimmi status (along with Jews, Samaritans, Gnostics, Mandeans, and Zoroastrians), which was inferior to the status of Muslims.[46][47] Christians and other religious minorities thus faced religious discrimination and religious persecution in that they were banned from proselytising (for Christians, it was forbidden to evangelize or spread Christianity) in the lands invaded by the Arab Muslims on pain of death, they were banned from bearing arms, undertaking certain professions, and were obligated to dress differently in order to distinguish themselves from Arabs.[47] Under sharia, Non-Muslims were obligated to pay jizya and kharaj taxes,[46][47][48] together with periodic heavy ransom levied upon Christian communities by Muslim rulers in order to fund military campaigns, all of which contributed a significant proportion of income to the Islamic states while conversely reducing many Christians to poverty, and these financial and social hardships forced many Christians to convert to Islam.[47] Christians unable to pay these taxes were forced to surrender their children to the Muslim rulers as payment who would sell them as slaves to Muslim households where they were forced to convert to Islam.[47] Many Christian martyrs were executed under the Islamic death penalty for defending their Christian faith through dramatic acts of resistance such as refusing to convert to Islam, repudiation of the Islamic religion and subsequent reconversion to Christianity, and blasphemy towards Muslim beliefs.[45]

Despite the wide use of the death penalty, calls for reform were not unknown. The 12th-century Jewish legal scholar Moses Maimonides wrote: "It is better and more satisfactory to acquit a thousand guilty persons than to put a single innocent man to death." He argued that executing an accused criminal on anything less than absolute certainty would lead to a slippery slope of decreasing burdens of proof, until we would be convicting merely "according to the judge's caprice". Maimonides's concern was maintaining popular respect for law, and he saw errors of commission as much more threatening than errors of omission.[49]

Enlightenment philosophy

While during the Middle Ages the expiatory aspect of the death penalty was taken into account, this is no longer the case under the Lumières. These define the place of man within society no longer according to a divine rule, but as a contract established at birth between the citizen and the society, it is the social contract. From that moment on, capital punishment should be seen as useful to society through its dissuasive effect, but also as a means of protection of the latter vis-à-vis criminals.[50]

Modern era

 
Antiporta of Dei delitti e delle pene (On Crimes and Punishments), 1766 ed.

In the last several centuries, with the emergence of modern nation states, justice came to be increasingly associated with the concept of natural and legal rights. The period saw an increase in standing police forces and permanent penitential institutions. Rational choice theory, a utilitarian approach to criminology which justifies punishment as a form of deterrence as opposed to retribution, can be traced back to Cesare Beccaria, whose influential treatise On Crimes and Punishments (1764) was the first detailed analysis of capital punishment to demand the abolition of the death penalty.[51] In England Jeremy Bentham (1748–1832), the founder of modern utilitarianism, called for the abolition of the death penalty.[52] Beccaria, and later Charles Dickens and Karl Marx noted the incidence of increased violent criminality at the times and places of executions. Official recognition of this phenomenon led to executions being carried out inside prisons, away from public view.

In England in the 18th century, when there was no police force, Parliament drastically increased the number of capital offences to more than 200. These were mainly property offences, for example cutting down a cherry tree in an orchard.[53] In 1820, there were 160, including crimes such as shoplifting, petty theft or stealing cattle.[54] The severity of the so-called Bloody Code was often tempered by juries who refused to convict, or judges, in the case of petty theft, who arbitrarily set the value stolen at below the statutory level for a capital crime.[55]

20th century

 
Mexican execution by firing squad, 1916

In Nazi Germany there were three types of capital punishment; hanging, decapitation and death by shooting.[56] Also, modern military organisations employed capital punishment as a means of maintaining military discipline. In the past, cowardice, absence without leave, desertion, insubordination, shirking under enemy fire and disobeying orders were often crimes punishable by death (see decimation and running the gauntlet). One method of execution, since firearms came into common use, has also been firing squad, although some countries use execution with a single shot to the head or neck.

 
50 Poles tried and sentenced to death by a Standgericht in retaliation for the assassination of 1 German policeman in Nazi-occupied Poland, 1944

Various authoritarian states—for example those with Fascist or Communist governments—employed the death penalty as a potent means of political oppression.[citation needed] According to Robert Conquest, the leading expert on Joseph Stalin's purges, more than one million Soviet citizens were executed during the Great Purge of 1937–38, almost all by a bullet to the back of the head.[57][better source needed] Mao Zedong publicly stated that "800,000" people had been executed in China during the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976). Partly as a response to such excesses, civil rights organizations started to place increasing emphasis on the concept of human rights and an abolition of the death penalty.[citation needed]

Contemporary era

By continent, all European states but one have abolished capital punishment;[note 1] many Oceanian states have abolished it;[note 2] most states in the Americas have abolished its use,[note 3] while a few actively retain it;[note 4] less than half of countries in Africa retain it;[note 5] and the majority of countries in Asia retain it.[note 6]

Abolition was often adopted due to political change, as when countries shifted from authoritarianism to democracy, or when it became an entry condition for the EU. The United States is a notable exception: some states have had bans on capital punishment for decades, the earliest being Michigan where it was abolished in 1846, while other states still actively use it today. The death penalty in the United States remains a contentious issue which is hotly debated.

In retentionist countries, the debate is sometimes revived when a miscarriage of justice has occurred though this tends to cause legislative efforts to improve the judicial process rather than to abolish the death penalty. In abolitionist countries, the debate is sometimes revived by particularly brutal murders though few countries have brought it back after abolishing it. However, a spike in serious, violent crimes, such as murders or terrorist attacks, has prompted some countries to effectively end the moratorium on the death penalty. One notable example is Pakistan which in December 2014 lifted a six-year moratorium on executions after the Peshawar school massacre during which 132 students and 9 members of staff of the Army Public School and Degree College Peshawar were killed by Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan terrorists, a group distinct from the Afghan Taliban, who condemned the attack.[58] Since then, Pakistan has executed over 400 convicts.[59]

In 2017, two major countries, Turkey and the Philippines, saw their executives making moves to reinstate the death penalty.[60] In the same year, passage of the law in the Philippines failed to obtain the Senate's approval.[61]

On 29 December 2021, after a 20-year moratorium, the Kazakhstan government enacted the 'On Amendments and Additions to Certain Legislative Acts of the Republic of Kazakhstan on the Abolition of the Death Penalty' signed by President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev as part of series of Omnibus reformations of the Kazak legal system 'Listening State' initiative.[citation needed]

History of abolition

 
Emperor Shōmu banned the death penalty in Japan in 724.

In 724 AD in Japan, the death penalty was banned during the reign of Emperor Shōmu but the abolition only lasted a few years.[62] In 818, Emperor Saga abolished the death penalty under the influence of Shinto and it lasted until 1156.[63] In China, the death penalty was banned by Emperor Xuanzong of Tang in 747, replacing it with exile or scourging. However, the ban only lasted 12 years.[62] Following his conversion to Christianity in 988, Vladimir the Great abolished the death penalty in Kievan Rus', along with torture and mutilation; corporal punishment was also seldom used.[64]

In England, a public statement of opposition was included in The Twelve Conclusions of the Lollards, written in 1395. Sir Thomas More's Utopia, published in 1516, debated the benefits of the death penalty in dialogue form, coming to no firm conclusion. More was himself executed for treason in 1535.

 
Peter Leopold II abolished the death penalty throughout Tuscany in 1786, making it the first nation in modern history to do so.

More recent opposition to the death penalty stemmed from the book of the Italian Cesare Beccaria Dei Delitti e Delle Pene ("On Crimes and Punishments"), published in 1764. In this book, Beccaria aimed to demonstrate not only the injustice, but even the futility from the point of view of social welfare, of torture and the death penalty. Influenced by the book, Grand Duke Leopold II of Habsburg, the future Emperor of Austria, abolished the death penalty in the then-independent Grand Duchy of Tuscany, the first permanent abolition in modern times. On 30 November 1786, after having de facto blocked executions (the last was in 1769), Leopold promulgated the reform of the penal code that abolished the death penalty and ordered the destruction of all the instruments for capital execution in his land. In 2000, Tuscany's regional authorities instituted an annual holiday on 30 November to commemorate the event. The event is commemorated on this day by 300 cities around the world celebrating Cities for Life Day. In the United Kingdom, it was abolished for murder (leaving only treason, piracy with violence, arson in royal dockyards and a number of wartime military offences as capital crimes) for a five-year experiment in 1965 and permanently in 1969, the last execution having taken place in 1964. It was abolished for all offences in 1998.[65] Protocol 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights, first entering into force in 2003, prohibits the death penalty in all circumstances for those states that are party to it, including the United Kingdom from 2004.

In the post-classical Republic of Poljica, life was ensured as a basic right in its Poljica Statute of 1440. The short-lived revolutionary Roman Republic banned capital punishment in 1849. Venezuela followed suit and abolished the death penalty in 1863[66] and San Marino did so in 1865. The last execution in San Marino had taken place in 1468. In Portugal, after legislative proposals in 1852 and 1863, the death penalty was abolished in 1867. The last execution in Brazil was 1876; from then on all the condemnations were commuted by the Emperor Pedro II until its abolition for civil offences and military offences in peacetime in 1891. The penalty for crimes committed in peacetime was then reinstated and abolished again twice (1938–1953 and 1969–1978), but on those occasions it was restricted to acts of terrorism or subversion considered "internal warfare" and all sentences were commuted and not carried out.

Abolition occurred in Canada in 1976 (except for some military offences, with complete abolition in 1998); in France in 1981; and in Australia in 1973 (although the state of Western Australia retained the penalty until 1984). In South Australia, under the premiership of then-Premier Dunstan, the Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (SA) was modified so that the death sentence was changed to life imprisonment in 1976.

In 1977, the United Nations General Assembly affirmed in a formal resolution that throughout the world, it is desirable to "progressively restrict the number of offences for which the death penalty might be imposed, with a view to the desirability of abolishing this punishment".[67]

In the United States, Michigan was the first state to ban the death penalty, on 18 May 1846.[68] The death penalty was declared unconstitutional between 1972 and 1976 based on the Furman v. Georgia case, but the 1976 Gregg v. Georgia case once again permitted the death penalty under certain circumstances. Further limitations were placed on the death penalty in Atkins v. Virginia (2002; death penalty unconstitutional for people with an intellectual disability) and Roper v. Simmons (2005; death penalty unconstitutional if defendant was under age 18 at the time the crime was committed). In the United States, 23 states and the District of Columbia ban capital punishment.

Many countries have abolished capital punishment either in law or in practice. Since World War II, there has been a trend toward abolishing capital punishment. Capital punishment has been completely abolished by 108 countries, a further seven have done so for all offences except under special circumstances and 26 more have abolished it in practice because they have not used it for at least 10 years and are believed to have a policy or established practice against carrying out executions.[69]

Contemporary use

By country

Most nations, including almost all developed countries, have abolished capital punishment either in law or in practice; notable exceptions are the United States, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea. Additionally, capital punishment is also carried out in China, India, and most Islamic states.[70][71][72][73][74][75]

Since World War II, there has been a trend toward abolishing the death penalty. 53 countries retain the death penalty in active use, 111 countries have abolished capital punishment altogether, 7 have done so for all offences except under special circumstances, and 24 more have abolished it in practice because they have not used it for at least 10 years and are believed to have a policy or established practice against carrying out executions.[6]

According to Amnesty International, 18 countries are known to have performed executions in 2020.[7] There are countries which do not publish information on the use of capital punishment, most significantly China and North Korea. According to Amnesty International, around 1,000 prisoners were executed in 2017.[76] Amnesty reported in 2004 and 2009 that Singapore and Iraq respectively had the world's highest per capita execution rate.[77][78] According to Al Jazeera and UN Special Rapporteur Ahmed Shaheed, Iran has had the world's highest per capita execution rate.[79][80] A 2012 EU report from the Directorate-General for External Relations' policy department pointed to Gaza as having the highest per capita execution rate in the MENA region.[81]

 
  Abolitionist countries: 111
  Abolitionist-in-law countries for all crimes except those committed under exceptional circumstances (such as crimes committed in wartime): 7
  Abolitionist-in-practice countries (have not executed anyone during the past 10 years or more and are believed to have a policy or established practice of not carrying out executions): 24
  Retentionist countries: 53
 
Number of abolitionist and retentionist countries by year
  Number of retentionist countries
  Number of abolitionist countries
Country Total executed
(2021)[82]
  Iran 353
  Egypt 82
  Saudi Arabia 64
  Syria 37
  Somalia 22
  Iraq 21
  Yemen 17
  United States 11
  China 6+
  Bangladesh 3
  Botswana 3
  Japan 3
  South Sudan 1
  Vietnam Unknown
  North Korea Unknown

 
A map showing U.S. states where the death penalty is authorized for certain crimes, even if not recently used. The death penalty is also authorized for certain federal and military crimes.
  States with a valid death penalty statute
  States without the death penalty

The use of the death penalty is becoming increasingly restrained in some retentionist countries including Taiwan and Singapore.[83][better source needed] Indonesia carried out no executions between November 2008 and March 2013.[84] Singapore, Japan and the United States are the only developed countries that are classified by Amnesty International as 'retentionist' (South Korea is classified as 'abolitionist in practice').[85][86] Nearly all retentionist countries are situated in Asia, Africa and the Caribbean.[85] The only retentionist country in Europe is Belarus. During the 1980s, the democratisation of Latin America swelled the ranks of abolitionist countries.[citation needed]

This was soon followed by the fall of Communism in Europe. Many of the countries which restored democracy aspired to enter the EU. The EU and the Council of Europe both strictly require member states not to practise the death penalty (see Capital punishment in Europe). Public support for the death penalty in the EU varies.[87] The last execution in a member state of the present-day Council of Europe took place in 1997 in Ukraine.[88][89] In contrast, the rapid industrialisation in Asia has seen an increase in the number of developed countries which are also retentionist. In these countries, the death penalty retains strong public support, and the matter receives little attention from the government or the media; in China there is a small but significant and growing movement to abolish the death penalty altogether.[90] This trend has been followed by some African and Middle Eastern countries where support for the death penalty remains high.

Some countries have resumed practising the death penalty after having previously suspended the practice for long periods. The United States suspended executions in 1972 but resumed them in 1976; there was no execution in India between 1995 and 2004; and Sri Lanka declared an end to its moratorium on the death penalty on 20 November 2004,[91] although it has not yet performed any further executions. The Philippines re-introduced the death penalty in 1993 after abolishing it in 1987, but again abolished it in 2006.[92]

The United States and Japan are the only developed countries to have recently carried out executions. The U.S. federal government, the U.S. military, and 27 states have a valid death penalty statute, and over 1,400 executions have been carried in the United States since it reinstated the death penalty in 1976. Japan has 106 inmates with finalized death sentences as of July 26, 2022, after executing Tomohiro Katō, who was charged with killing seven and injured ten in Akihabara massacre in June 2008.[93]

The most recent country to abolish the death penalty was Kazakhstan on 2 January 2021 after a moratorium dating back 2 decades.[94][95]

According to an Amnesty International report released in April 2020, Egypt ranked regionally third and globally fifth among the countries that carried out most executions in 2019. The country increasingly became ignorant of international human rights concerns and criticism. In March 2021, Egypt executed 11 prisoners in a jail, who were convicted in cases of "murder, theft, and shooting".[96]

According to Amnesty International's 2021 report, at least 483 people were executed in 2020 despite the COVID-19 pandemic. The figure excluded the countries that classify death penalty data as state secret. The top five executioners for 2020 were China, Iran, Egypt, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.[97]

Modern-day public opinion

The public opinion on the death penalty varies considerably by country and by the crime in question. Countries where a majority of people are against execution include Norway, where only 25% are in favour.[98] Most French, Finns, and Italians also oppose the death penalty.[99] A 2020 Gallup poll shows that 55% of Americans support the death penalty for an individual convicted of murder, down from 60% in 2016, 64% in 2010, 65% in 2006, and 68% in 2001.[100][101][102][103] In 2020, 43% of Italians expressed support for the death penalty.[104][105][106]

In Taiwan, polls and research have consistently shown strong support for the death penalty at 80%. This includes a survey conducted by the National Development Council of Taiwan in 2016, showing that 88% of Taiwanese people disagree with abolishing the death penalty.[107][108][109] Its continuation of the practice drew criticism from local rights groups.[110]

The support and sentencing of capital punishment has been growing in India in the 2010s[111] due to anger over several recent brutal cases of rape, even though actual executions are comparatively rare.[111] While support for the death penalty for murder is still high in China, executions have dropped precipitously, with 3,000 executed in 2012 versus 12,000 in 2002.[112] A poll in South Africa, where capital punishment is abolished, found that 76% of millennial South Africans support re-introduction of the death penalty due to increasing incidents of rape and murder.[113][114] A 2017 poll found younger Mexicans are more likely to support capital punishment than older ones.[115] 57% of Brazilians support the death penalty. The age group that shows the greatest support for execution of those condemned is the 25 to 34-year-old category, in which 61% say they are in favor.[116]

Juvenile offenders

The death penalty for juvenile offenders (criminals aged under 18 years at the time of their crime although the legal or accepted definition of juvenile offender may vary from one jurisdiction to another) has become increasingly rare. Considering the age of majority is not 18 in some countries or has not been clearly defined in law, since 1990 ten countries have executed offenders who were considered juveniles at the time of their crimes: The People's Republic of China (PRC), Bangladesh, Democratic Republic of Congo, Iran, Iraq, Japan, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, the United States, and Yemen.[117] China, Pakistan, the United States, Yemen and Saudi Arabia have since raised the minimum age to 18.[118][119] Amnesty International has recorded 61 verified executions since then, in several countries, of both juveniles and adults who had been convicted of committing their offences as juveniles.[120] The PRC does not allow for the execution of those under 18, but child executions have reportedly taken place.[121]

 
Mother Catherine Cauchés (center) and her two daughters Guillemine Gilbert (left) and Perotine Massey (right) with her infant son burning for heresy

One of the youngest children ever to be executed was the infant son of Perotine Massey on or around 18 July 1556. His mother was one of the Guernsey Martyrs who was executed for heresy, and his father had previously fled the island. At less than one day old, he was ordered to be burned by Bailiff Hellier Gosselin, with the advice of priests nearby who said the boy should burn due to having inherited moral stain from his mother, who had given birth during her execution.[122]

Starting from 1642 in Colonial America until the present day in the United States, an estimated 365[123] juvenile offenders were executed by various colonial authorities and (after the American Revolution) the federal government.[124] The U.S. Supreme Court abolished capital punishment for offenders under the age of 16 in Thompson v. Oklahoma (1988), and for all juveniles in Roper v. Simmons (2005).

In Prussia, children under the age of 14 were exempted from the death penalty in 1794.[125] Capital punishment was cancelled by the Electorate of Bavaria in 1751 for children under the age of 11[126] and by the Kingdom of Bavaria in 1813 for children and youth under 16 years.[127] In Prussia, the exemption was extended to youth under the age of 16 in 1851.[128] For the first time, all juveniles were excluded for the death penalty by the North German Confederation in 1871,[129] which was continued by the German Empire in 1872.[130] In Nazi Germany, capital punishment was reinstated for juveniles between 16 and 17 years in 1939.[131] This was broadened to children and youth from age 12 to 17 in 1943.[132] The death penalty for juveniles was abolished by West Germany, also generally, in 1949 and by East Germany in 1952.

In the Hereditary Lands, Austrian Silesia, Bohemia and Moravia within the Habsburg monarchy, capital punishment for children under the age of 11 was no longer foreseen by 1770.[133] The death penalty was, also for juveniles, nearly abolished in 1787 except for emergency or military law, which is unclear in regard of those. It was reintroduced for juveniles above 14 years by 1803,[134] and was raised by general criminal law to 20 years in 1852[135] and this exemption[136] and the alike one of military law in 1855,[137] which may have been up to 14 years in wartime,[138] were also introduced into all of the Austrian Empire.

In the Helvetic Republic, the death penalty for children and youth under the age of 16 was abolished in 1799[139] yet the country was already dissolved in 1803 whereas the law could remain in force if it was not replaced on cantonal level. In the canton of Bern, all juveniles were exempted from the death penalty at least in 1866.[140] In Fribourg, capital punishment was generally, including for juveniles, abolished by 1849. In Ticino, it was abolished for youth and young adults under the age of 20 in 1816.[141] In Zurich, the exclusion from the death penalty was extended for juveniles and young adults up to 19 years of age by 1835.[142] In 1942, the death penalty was almost deleted in criminal law, as well for juveniles, but since 1928 persisted in military law during wartime for youth above 14 years.[143] If no earlier change was made in the given subject, by 1979 juveniles could no longer be subject to the death penalty in military law during wartime.[144]

Between 2005 and May 2008, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Yemen were reported to have executed child offenders, the largest number occurring in Iran.[145]

During Hassan Rouhani's tenure as president of Iran from 2013 until 2021, at least 3,602 death sentences have been carried out. This includes the executions of 34 juvenile offenders.[146][147]

The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which forbids capital punishment for juveniles under article 37(a), has been signed by all countries and subsequently ratified by all signatories with the exception of the United States (despite the US Supreme Court decisions abolishing the practice).[148] The UN Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights maintains that the death penalty for juveniles has become contrary to a jus cogens of customary international law. A majority of countries are also party to the U.N. International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (whose Article 6.5 also states that "Sentence of death shall not be imposed for crimes committed by persons below eighteen years of age...").

Iran, despite its ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, was the world's largest executioner of juvenile offenders, for which it has been the subject of broad international condemnation; the country's record is the focus of the Stop Child Executions Campaign. But on 10 February 2012, Iran's parliament changed controversial laws relating to the execution of juveniles. In the new legislation the age of 18 (solar year) would be applied to accused of both genders and juvenile offenders must be sentenced pursuant to a separate law specifically dealing with juveniles.[118][119] Based on the Islamic law which now seems to have been revised, girls at the age of 9 and boys at 15 of lunar year (11 days shorter than a solar year) are deemed fully responsible for their crimes.[118] Iran accounted for two-thirds of the global total of such executions, and currently[needs update] has approximately 140 people considered as juveniles awaiting execution for crimes committed (up from 71 in 2007).[149][150] The past executions of Mahmoud Asgari, Ayaz Marhoni and Makwan Moloudzadeh became the focus of Iran's child capital punishment policy and the judicial system that hands down such sentences.[151][152]

Saudi Arabia also executes criminals who were minors at the time of the offence.[153][154] In 2013, Saudi Arabia was the center of an international controversy after it executed Rizana Nafeek, a Sri Lankan domestic worker, who was believed to have been 17 years old at the time of the crime.[155] Saudi Arabia banned execution for minors, except for terrorism cases, in April 2020.[156]

Japan has not executed juvenile criminals after August 1997, when they executed Norio Nagayama, a spree killer who had been convicted of shooting four people dead in the late 1960s. Nagayama's case created the eponymously named Nagayama standards, which take into account factors such as the number of victims, brutality and social impact of the crimes. The standards have been used in determining whether to apply the death sentence in murder cases. Teruhiko Seki, convicted of murdering four family members including a 4-year-old daughter and raping a 15-year-old daughter of a family in 1992, became the second inmate to be hanged for a crime committed as a minor in the first such execution in 20 years after Nagayama on 19 December 2017.[157] Takayuki Otsuki, who was convicted of raping and strangling a 23-year-old woman and subsequently strangling her 11-month-old daughter to death on 14 April 1999, when he was 18, is another inmate sentenced to death, and his request for retrial has been rejected by the Supreme Court of Japan.[158]

There is evidence that child executions are taking place in the parts of Somalia controlled by the Islamic Courts Union (ICU). In October 2008, a girl, Aisha Ibrahim Dhuhulow was buried up to her neck at a football stadium, then stoned to death in front of more than 1,000 people. Somalia's established Transitional Federal Government announced in November 2009 (reiterated in 2013)[159] that it plans to ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child. This move was lauded by UNICEF as a welcome attempt to secure children's rights in the country.[160]

Methods

 
The Red Guard prisoners are being executed by the Whites in Varkaus, North Savonia, during the 1918 Finnish Civil War.

The following methods of execution have been used by various countries:[161][162][163][164][165]

Public execution

A public execution is a form of capital punishment which "members of the general public may voluntarily attend". This definition excludes the presence of a small number of witnesses randomly selected to assure executive accountability.[166] While today the great majority of the world considers public executions to be distasteful and most countries have outlawed the practice, throughout much of history executions were performed publicly as a means for the state to demonstrate "its power before those who fell under its jurisdiction be they criminals, enemies, or political opponents". Additionally, it afforded the public a chance to witness "what was considered a great spectacle".[167]

Social historians note that beginning in the 20th century in the U.S. and western Europe, death in general became increasingly shielded from public view, occurring more and more behind the closed doors of the hospital.[168] Executions were likewise moved behind the walls of the penitentiary.[168] The last formal public executions occurred in 1868 in Britain, in 1936 in the U.S. and in 1939 in France.[168]

According to Amnesty International, in 2012, "public executions were known to have been carried out in Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia and Somalia".[169] There have been reports of public executions carried out by state and non-state actors in Hamas-controlled Gaza, Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Yemen.[170][171][172] Executions which can be classified as public were also carried out in the U.S. states of Florida and Utah as of 1992.[166]

Capital crime

Crimes against humanity

Crimes against humanity such as genocide are usually punishable by death in countries retaining capital punishment.[citation needed] Death sentences for such crimes were handed down and carried out during the Nuremberg Trials in 1946 and the Tokyo Trials in 1948, but the current International Criminal Court does not use capital punishment. The maximum penalty available to the International Criminal Court is life imprisonment.[173]

Murder

Intentional homicide is punishable by death in most countries retaining capital punishment, but generally provided it involves an aggravating factor required by statute or judicial precedents.[citation needed] Some countries like Singapore and Malaysia made the death penalty mandatory for murder, though Singapore later changed its laws since 2013 to reserve the mandatory death sentence for intentional murder while providing an alternative sentence of life imprisonment with/without caning for murder with no intention to cause death, which allowed some convicted murderers on death row in Singapore (including Kho Jabing) to apply for the reduction of their death sentences after the courts in Singapore confirmed that they committed murder without the intention to kill and thus eligible for re-sentencing under the new death penalty laws in Singapore.[174][175] In 2019 Malaysia considered abolishing the death penalty, but instead abolished mandatory death sentences; any death sentence is now passed at the judge's discretion.[176] In June 2022, Malaysian law minister Wan Junaidi pledged to abolish capital punishment and replace it with other punishments at the discretion of the court.[177]

Drug trafficking

 
A sign at the Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport warns arriving travelers that drug trafficking is a capital crime in the Republic of China (photo taken in 2005)

In 2018, at least 35 countries retained the death penalty for drug trafficking, drug dealing, drug possession and related offences.[178] People are regularly sentenced to death and executed for drug-related offences in China, Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore and Vietnam.[178] Other countries may retain the death penalty for symbolic purposes.[178]

The death penalty is mandated for drug trafficking in Singapore and Malaysia, though since 2013, Singapore ruled that those who were certified to have diminished responsibility (e.g. Major depressive disorder) or acting as drug couriers and had assisted the authorities in tackling drug-related activities, will be sentenced to life imprisonment instead of death, with the offender liable to at least 15 strokes of the cane if he was not sentenced to death and was simultaneously sentenced to caning as well.[174][175] Notable drug couriers include Yong Vui Kong, whose death sentence was replaced with a life sentence and 15 strokes of the cane in November 2013.[179] A famous example of drug-related execution pertains to members of the Bali Nine.

Other offences

Other crimes that are punishable by death in some countries include:

Controversy and debate

Death penalty opponents regard the death penalty as inhumane[187] and criticize it for its irreversibility.[188] They argue also that capital punishment lacks deterrent effect,[189][190][191] or has a brutalization effect,[192][193] discriminates against minorities and the poor, and that it encourages a "culture of violence".[194] There are many organizations worldwide, such as Amnesty International,[195] and country-specific, such as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), that have abolition of the death penalty as its main purpose.[196][197]

Advocates of the death penalty argue that it deters crime,[198][199] is a good tool for police and prosecutors in plea bargaining,[200] makes sure that convicted criminals do not offend again, and that it ensures justice for crimes such as homicide, where other penalties will not inflict the desired retribution demanded by the crime itself. Capital punishment for non-lethal crimes is usually considerably more controversial, and abolished in many of the countries that retain it.[201][202]

Retribution

 
Execution of a war criminal in Germany in 1946

Supporters of the death penalty argued that death penalty is morally justified when applied in murder especially with aggravating elements such as for murder of police officers, child murder, torture murder, multiple homicide and mass killing such as terrorism, massacre and genocide. This argument is strongly defended by New York Law School's Professor Robert Blecker,[203] who says that the punishment must be painful in proportion to the crime. Eighteenth-century philosopher Immanuel Kant defended a more extreme position, according to which every murderer deserves to die on the grounds that loss of life is incomparable to any penalty that allows them to remain alive, including life imprisonment.[204]

Some abolitionists argue that retribution is simply revenge and cannot be condoned. Others while accepting retribution as an element of criminal justice nonetheless argue that life without parole is a sufficient substitute. It is also argued that the punishing of a killing with another death is a relatively unusual punishment for a violent act, because in general violent crimes are not punished by subjecting the perpetrator to a similar act (e.g. rapists are, typically, not punished by corporal punishment, although it may be inflicted in Singapore, for example).[205]

Human rights

Abolitionists believe capital punishment is the worst violation of human rights, because the right to life is the most important, and capital punishment violates it without necessity and inflicts to the condemned a psychological torture. Human rights activists oppose the death penalty, calling it "cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment". Amnesty International considers it to be "the ultimate irreversible denial of Human Rights".[206] Albert Camus wrote in a 1956 book called Reflections on the Guillotine, Resistance, Rebellion & Death:

An execution is not simply death. It is just as different from the privation of life as a concentration camp is from prison. [...] For there to be an equivalency, the death penalty would have to punish a criminal who had warned his victim of the date at which he would inflict a horrible death on him and who, from that moment onward, had confined him at his mercy for months. Such a monster is not encountered in private life.[207]

In the classic doctrine of natural rights as expounded by for instance Locke and Blackstone, on the other hand, it is an important idea that the right to life can be forfeited, as most other rights can be given due process is observed, such as the right to property and the right to freedom, including provisionally, in anticipation of an actual verdict.[208] As John Stuart Mill explained in a speech given in Parliament against an amendment to abolish capital punishment for murder in 1868:

And we may imagine somebody asking how we can teach people not to inflict suffering by ourselves inflicting it? But to this I should answer – all of us would answer – that to deter by suffering from inflicting suffering is not only possible, but the very purpose of penal justice. Does fining a criminal show want of respect for property, or imprisoning him, for personal freedom? Just as unreasonable is it to think that to take the life of a man who has taken that of another is to show want of regard for human life. We show, on the contrary, most emphatically our regard for it, by the adoption of a rule that he who violates that right in another forfeits it for himself, and that while no other crime that he can commit deprives him of his right to live, this shall.[209]

In one of the most recent cases relating to the death penalty in Singapore, activists like Jolovan Wham, Kirsten Han and Kokila Annamalai and even the international groups like the United Nations and European Union argued for Malaysian drug trafficker Nagaenthran K. Dharmalingam, who has been on death row at Singapore's Changi Prison since 2010, should not be executed due to an alleged intellectual disability, as they argued that Nagaenthran has low IQ of 69 and a psychiatrist has assessed him to be mentally impaired to an extent that he should not be held liable to his crime and execution. They also cited international law where a country should be prohibiting the execution of mentally and intellectually impaired people in order to push for Singapore to commute Nagaenthran's death penalty to life imprisonment based on protection of human rights. However, the Singapore government and both Singapore's High Court and Court of Appeal maintained their firm stance that despite his certified low IQ, it is confirmed that Nagaenthran is not mentally or intellectually disabled based on the joint opinion of three government psychiatrists as he is able to fully understand the magnitude of his actions and has no problem in his daily functioning of life.[210][211][212] Despite the international outcry, Nagaenthran was executed on 27 April 2022.[213]

Non-painful execution

 
A gurney at San Quentin State Prison in California formerly used for executions by lethal injection

Trends in most of the world have long been to move to private and less painful executions. France developed the guillotine for this reason in the final years of the 18th century, while Britain banned hanging, drawing, and quartering in the early 19th century. Hanging by turning the victim off a ladder or by kicking a stool or a bucket, which causes death by strangulation, was replaced by long drop "hanging" where the subject is dropped a longer distance to dislocate the neck and sever the spinal cord. Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar, Shah of Persia (1896–1907) introduced throat-cutting and blowing from a gun (close-range cannon fire) as quick and relatively painless alternatives to more torturous methods of executions used at that time.[214] In the United States, electrocution and gas inhalation were introduced as more humane alternatives to hanging, but have been almost entirely superseded by lethal injection. A small number of countries, for example Iran and Saudi Arabia, still employ slow hanging methods, decapitation, and stoning.

A study of executions carried out in the United States between 1977 and 2001 indicated that at least 34 of the 749 executions, or 4.5%, involved "unanticipated problems or delays that caused, at least arguably, unnecessary agony for the prisoner or that reflect gross incompetence of the executioner". The rate of these "botched executions" remained steady over the period of the study.[215] A separate study published in The Lancet in 2005 found that in 43% of cases of lethal injection, the blood level of hypnotics was insufficient to guarantee unconsciousness.[216] However, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2008 (Baze v. Rees) and again in 2015 (Glossip v. Gross) that lethal injection does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment.[217] In Bucklew v. Precythe, the majority verdict – written by Judge Neil Gorsuch – further affirmed this principle, stating that while the ban on cruel and unusual punishment affirmatively bans penalties that deliberately inflict pain and degradation, it does in no sense limit the possible infliction of pain in the execution of a capital verdict.[218]

Wrongful execution

 
Capital punishment was abolished in the United Kingdom in part because of the case of Timothy Evans, who was executed in 1950 after being wrongfully convicted of two murders that had in fact been committed by his landlord, John Christie. The case was considered vital in bolstering opposition, which limited the scope of the penalty in 1957 and abolished it completely, for murder, in 1965.

It is frequently argued that capital punishment leads to miscarriage of justice through the wrongful execution of innocent persons.[219] Many people have been proclaimed innocent victims of the death penalty.[220][221][222]

Some have claimed that as many as 39 executions have been carried out in the face of compelling evidence of innocence or serious doubt about guilt in the US from 1992 through 2004. Newly available DNA evidence prevented the pending execution of more than 15 death row inmates during the same period in the US,[223] but DNA evidence is only available in a fraction of capital cases.[224] As of 2017, 159 prisoners on death row have been exonerated by DNA or other evidence, which is seen as an indication that innocent prisoners have almost certainly been executed.[225][226] The National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty claims that between 1976 and 2015, 1,414 prisoners in the United States have been executed while 156 sentenced to death have had their death sentences vacated.[227] It is impossible to assess how many have been wrongly executed, since courts do not generally investigate the innocence of a dead defendant, and defense attorneys tend to concentrate their efforts on clients whose lives can still be saved; however, there is strong evidence of innocence in many cases.[228]

Improper procedure may also result in unfair executions. For example, Amnesty International argues that in Singapore "the Misuse of Drugs Act contains a series of presumptions which shift the burden of proof from the prosecution to the accused. This conflicts with the universally guaranteed right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty".[229] Singapore's Misuse of Drugs Act presumes one is guilty of possession of drugs if, as examples, one is found to be present or escaping from a location "proved or presumed to be used for the purpose of smoking or administering a controlled drug", if one is in possession of a key to a premises where drugs are present, if one is in the company of another person found to be in possession of illegal drugs, or if one tests positive after being given a mandatory urine drug screening. Urine drug screenings can be given at the discretion of police, without requiring a search warrant. The onus is on the accused in all of the above situations to prove that they were not in possession of or consumed illegal drugs.[230]

Volunteers

Some prisoners have volunteered or attempted to expedite capital punishment, often by waiving all appeals. Prisoners have made requests or committed further crimes in prison as well. In the United States, execution volunteers constitute approximately 11% of prisoners on death row. Volunteers often bypass legal procedures which are designed to designate the death penalty for the "worst of the worst" offenders. Opponents of execution volunteering cited the prevalence of mental illness among volunteers comparing it to suicide. Execution volunteers have received considerably less attention and effort at legal reform than those who were exonerated after execution.[231]

Racial, ethnic and social class bias

Opponents of the death penalty argue that this punishment is being used more often against perpetrators from racial and ethnic minorities and from lower socioeconomic backgrounds, than against those criminals who come from a privileged background; and that the background of the victim also influences the outcome.[232][233][234] Researchers have shown that white Americans are more likely to support the death penalty when told that it is mostly applied to black Americans,[235] and that more stereotypically black-looking or darkskinned defendants are more likely to be sentenced to death if the case involves a white victim.[236] However, a study published in 2018 failed to replicate the findings of earlier studies that had concluded that white Americans are more likely to support the death penalty if informed that it is largely applied to black Americans; according to the authors, their findings "may result from changes since 2001 in the effects of racial stimuli on white attitudes about the death penalty or their willingness to express those attitudes in a survey context."[237]

In Alabama in 2019, a death row inmate named Domineque Ray was denied his imam in the room during his execution, instead only offered a Christian chaplain.[238] After filing a complaint, a federal court of appeals ruled 5–4 against Ray's request. The majority cited the "last-minute" nature of the request, and the dissent stated that the treatment went against the core principle of denominational neutrality.[238]

In July 2019, two Shiite men, Ali Hakim al-Arab, 25, and Ahmad al-Malali, 24, were executed in Bahrain, despite the protests from the United Nations and rights group. Amnesty International stated that the executions were being carried out on confessions of "terrorism crimes" that were obtained through torture.[239]

On 30 March 2022, despite the appeals by the United Nations and rights activists, 68-year-old Malay Singaporean Abdul Kahar Othman was hanged at Singapore's Changi Prison for illegally trafficking diamorphine, which marked the first execution in Singapore since 2019 as a result of an informal moratorium caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Earlier, there were appeals made to advocate for Abdul Kahar's death penalty be commuted to life imprisonment on humanitarian grounds, as Abdul Kahar came from a poor family and has struggled with drug addiction. He was also revealed to have been spending most of his life going in and out of prison, including a ten-year sentence of preventive detention from 1995 to 2005, and has not been given much time for rehabilitation, which made the activists and groups arguing that Abdul Kahar should be given a chance for rehabilitation instead of subjecting him to execution.[240][241][242] Both the European Union (EU) and Amnesty International criticised Singapore for finalizing and carrying out Abdul Kahar's execution, and about 400 Singaporeans protested against the government's use of the death penalty merely days after Abdul Kahar's death sentence was authorised.[243][244][245][211] Still, over 80% of the public supported the use of the death penalty in Singapore.[246]

International views

 
Same-sex intercourse illegal:
  Death penalty in legislation, but not applied

The United Nations introduced a resolution during the General Assembly's 62nd sessions in 2007 calling for a universal ban.[247][248] The approval of a draft resolution by the Assembly's third committee, which deals with human rights issues, voted 99 to 52, with 33 abstentions, in favour of the resolution on 15 November 2007 and was put to a vote in the Assembly on 18 December.[249][250][251]

Again in 2008, a large majority of states from all regions adopted, on 20 November in the UN General Assembly (Third Committee), a second resolution calling for a moratorium on the use of the death penalty; 105 countries voted in favour of the draft resolution, 48 voted against and 31 abstained.

A range of amendments proposed by a small minority of pro-death penalty countries were overwhelmingly defeated. It had in 2007 passed a non-binding resolution (by 104 to 54, with 29 abstentions) by asking its member states for "a moratorium on executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty".[252]

 
Article 2 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union affirms the prohibition on capital punishment in the EU

A number of regional conventions prohibit the death penalty, most notably, the Sixth Protocol (abolition in time of peace) and the 13th Protocol (abolition in all circumstances) to the European Convention on Human Rights. The same is also stated under the Second Protocol in the American Convention on Human Rights, which, however, has not been ratified by all countries in the Americas, most notably Canada[253] and the United States. Most relevant operative international treaties do not require its prohibition for cases of serious crime, most notably, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. This instead has, in common with several other treaties, an optional protocol prohibiting capital punishment and promoting its wider abolition.[254]

Several international organizations have made abolition of the death penalty (during time of peace, or in all circumstances) a requirement of membership, most notably the EU and the Council of Europe. The Council of Europe are willing to accept a moratorium as an interim measure. Thus, while Russia was a member of the Council of Europe, and the death penalty remains codified in its law, it has not made use of it since becoming a member of the council – Russia has not executed anyone since 1996. With the exception of Russia (abolitionist in practice) and Belarus (retentionist), all European countries are classified as abolitionist.[85]

Latvia abolished de jure the death penalty for war crimes in 2012, becoming the last EU member to do so.[255]

Protocol no. 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights calls for the abolition of the death penalty in all circumstances (including for war crimes). The majority of European countries have signed and ratified it. Some European countries have not done this, but all of them except Belarus have now abolished the death penalty in all circumstances (de jure, and Russia de facto). Poland is the most recent country to ratify the protocol, on 28 August 2013.[256]

Protocol no. 6, which prohibits the death penalty during peacetime, has been ratified by all members of the Council of Europe. It had been signed but not ratified by Russia at the time of its expulsion in 2022.

 
Signatories to the Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR: parties in dark green, signatories in light green, non-members in grey

There are also other international abolitionist instruments, such as the Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which has 90 parties;[257] and the Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights to Abolish the Death Penalty (for the Americas; ratified by 13 states).[258]

In Turkey, over 500 people were sentenced to death after the 1980 Turkish coup d'état. About 50 of them were executed, the last one 25 October 1984. Then there was a de facto moratorium on the death penalty in Turkey. As a move towards EU membership, Turkey made some legal changes. The death penalty was removed from peacetime law by the National Assembly in August 2002, and in May 2004 Turkey amended its constitution to remove capital punishment in all circumstances. It ratified Protocol no. 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights in February 2006.[citation needed] As a result, Europe is a continent free of the death penalty in practice, all states , having ratified the Sixth Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights, with the exceptions of Russia (which has entered a moratorium) and Belarus, which are not members of the Council of Europe.[citation needed] The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has been lobbying for Council of Europe observer states who practise the death penalty, the U.S. and Japan, to abolish it or lose their observer status. In addition to banning capital punishment for EU member states, the EU has also banned detainee transfers in cases where the receiving party may seek the death penalty.[citation needed]

Sub-Saharan African countries that have recently abolished the death penalty include Burundi, which abolished the death penalty for all crimes in 2009,[259] and Gabon which did the same in 2010.[260] On 5 July 2012, Benin became part of the Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which prohibits the use of the death penalty.[261]

The newly created South Sudan is among the 111 UN member states that supported the resolution passed by the United Nations General Assembly that called for the removal of the death penalty, therefore affirming its opposition to the practice. South Sudan, however, has not yet abolished the death penalty and stated that it must first amend its Constitution, and until that happens it will continue to use the death penalty.[262]

Among non-governmental organizations (NGOs), Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are noted for their opposition to capital punishment.[263][264] A number of such NGOs, as well as trade unions, local councils, and bar associations, formed a World Coalition Against the Death Penalty in 2002.[265]

An open letter led by Danish Member of the European Parliament, Karen Melchior was sent to the European Commission ahead of the 26 January 2021 meeting of the Bahraini Minister of Foreign Affairs, Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zayani with the members of the European Union for the signing of a Cooperation Agreement. A total of 16 MEPs undersigned the letter expressing their grave concern towards the extended abuse of human rights in Bahrain following the arbitrary arrest and detention of activists and critics of the government. The attendees of the meeting were requested to demand from their Bahraini counterparts to take into consideration the concerns raised by the MEPs, particularly for the release of Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja and Sheikh Mohammed Habib Al-Muqdad, the two European-Bahraini dual citizens on death row.[266][267]

Religious views

The world's major faiths have differing views depending on the religion, denomination, sect and/or the individual adherent. As an example, the world's largest Christian denomination, Catholicism, has traditionally supported capital punishment as a necessary evil, but in modern times opposes capital punishment in all cases.[268][269]

Pope John Paul II made a public address in St. Louis, Missouri in 1999 reminding the members of the Catholic Church to be unconditionally pro-life and uphold the dignity of all persons, even if in the eyes of the government they forfeited those rights by their own conduct.[270] Early theologians of the Church, such as Saint Augustine and Saint Thomas Aquinas, seem to uphold the use of capital punishment only to the extent that it is not used in malice or frustration, but in the interest of dissuading imitators of the evil conducted to warrant punishment originally.[271] As time goes on, the authority of the church has continued to develop, with only slight variation, a more universal rule that suggests the rare use of capital punishment, specifically the death penalty, is so rare as to be generally non-viable. The grounds for this trend lie most often in the existing trend of capital punishment propagating revenge more than true justice.[272]

Both the Baháʼí and Islamic faiths support capital punishment.[273][274]

See also

Notes and references

Notes

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Belarus
  2. ^ including Australia and New Zealand.
  3. ^ Most Latin American states and Canada have completely abolished capital punishment, while a few such as Brazil and Guatemala allow for it only in exceptional situations (such as treason committed during wartime).
  4. ^ The United States and some Caribbean countries.
  5. ^ For example South Africa abolished the death penalty in 1995, while Botswana and Zambia retain it.
  6. ^ For example, China, Japan and India actively retain it.

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Bibliography

  • Jean-Marie Carbasse (2002). La peine de mort. Que sais-je ? (in French). Paris: Presses universitaires de France. ISBN 2-13-051660-2.
  • Kronenwetter, Michael (2001). Capital Punishment: A Reference Handbook (2 ed.). ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-432-9.
  • Marian J. Borg and Michael L. Radelet. (2004). On botched executions. In: Peter Hodgkinson and William A. Schabas (eds.) Capital Punishment. pp. 143–68. [Online]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Available from: Cambridge Books Online doi:10.1017/CBO9780511489273.006.
  • Gail A. Van Norman. (2010). Physician participation in executions. In: Gail A. Van Norman et al. (eds.) Clinical Ethics in Anesthesiology. pp. 285–91. [Online]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Available from: Cambridge Books Online doi:10.1017/CBO9780511841361.051.

Further reading

  • Bellarmine, Robert (1902). "Seventh Sunday: Capital Punishment" . Sermons from the Latins. Benziger Brothers.
  • Bohm, Robert M. (2016). Death Quest. doi:10.4324/9781315673998. ISBN 9781315673998.
  • Curry, Tim. "Cutting the Hangman's Noose: African Initiatives to Abolish the Death Penalty 20 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine." () American University Washington College of Law.
  • Davis, David Brion. "The movement to abolish capital punishment in America, 1787–1861." American Historical Review 63.1 (1957): 23–46. online
  • Gaie, Joseph B. R (2004). The ethics of medical involvement in capital punishment : a philosophical discussion. Kluwer Academic. ISBN 978-1-4020-1764-3.
  • Hammel, A. Ending the Death Penalty: The European Experience in Global Perspective (2014).
  • Hood, Roger (2001). "Capital Punishment". Punishment & Society. 3 (3): 331–354. doi:10.1177/1462474501003003001. S2CID 143875533.
  • Johnson, David T.; Zimring, Franklin E. (2009). The Next Frontier: National Development, Political Change, and the Death Penalty in Asia. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533740-2.
  • McCafferty, James A (2010). Capital Punishment. AldineTransaction. ISBN 978-0-202-36328-8.
  • Mandery, Evan J (2005). Capital punishment: a balanced examination. Jones and Bartlett Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7637-3308-7.
  • Marzilli, Alan (2008). Capital Punishment – Point-counterpoint (2nd ed.). Chelsea House. ISBN 978-0-7910-9796-0.
  • O'Brien, Doireann. "Investigating the Origin of Europe and America's Diverging Positions on the Issue of Capital Punishment." Social and Political Review (2018): 98+. online 21 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Rakoff, Jed S., "The Last of His Kind" (review of John Paul Stevens, The Making of a Justice: Reflections on My First 94 Years, Little, Brown, 549 pp.), The New York Review of Books, vol. LXVI, no. 14 (26 September 2019), pp. 20, 22, 24. John Paul Stevens, "a throwback to the postwar liberal Republican [U.S. Supreme Court] appointees", questioned the validity of "the doctrine of sovereign immunity, which holds that you cannot sue any state or federal government agency, or any of its officers or employees, for any wrong they may have committed against you, unless the state or federal government consents to being sued" (p. 20); the propriety of "the increasing resistance of the U.S. Supreme Court to most meaningful forms of gun control" (p. 22); and "the constitutionality of the death penalty... because of incontrovertible evidence that innocent people have been sentenced to death." (pp. 22, 24.)
  • Sarat, Austin and Juergen Martschukat, eds. Is the Death Penalty Dying?: European and American Perspectives (2011)
  • Woolf, Alex (2004). World issues – Capital Punishment. Chrysalis Education. ISBN 978-1-59389-155-8. for middle school students
  • Simon, Rita (2007). A comparative analysis of capital punishment : statutes, policies, frequencies, and public attitudes the world over. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-2091-0.
  • Slater S.J., Thomas (1925). "Book 6: On Capital Punishment" . A manual of moral theology for English-speaking countries. Burns Oates & Washbourne Ltd.
  • Steiker, Carol S. "Capital punishment and American exceptionalism." Oregon Law Review. 81 (2002): 97+ online
  • Willis, John Willey (1911). "Capital Punishment" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links

  • About.com's Pros & Cons of the Death Penalty and Capital Punishment 18 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  • Capital Punishment article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • 1000+ Death Penalty links all in one place
  • Death Penalty Worldwide: 13 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Academic research database on the laws, practice, and statistics of capital punishment for every death penalty country in the world.
  • Answers.com entry on capital punishment
  • "How to Kill a Human Being", BBC Horizon TV programme documentary, 2008
  • Megalaw
  • Two audio documentaries covering execution in the United States:
  • Wrongfully Convicted Citizens: capital punishment of wrongfully convicted citizens in the US, 2017

In favour

External video
  Singapore's Mandatory Death Penalty on Drug Trafficking- Government of Singapore
  • Studies showing the death penalty saves lives
  • Keep life without parole and death penalty intact
  • Why the death penalty is needed
  • Pro Death Penalty Resource Page
  • 119 Pro DP Links
  • The Death Penalty is Constitutional
  • The Paradoxes of a Death Penalty Stance by Charles Lane in The Washington Post
  • Clark County, Indiana, Prosecutor's Page on capital punishment
  • – Famous Quotes supporting Capital Punishment
  • Studies spur new death penalty debate

Opposing

  • World Coalition Against the Death Penalty
  • International anti-death penalty campaign group
  • Campaign to End the Death Penalty
  • Anti-Death Penalty Information: includes a monthly watchlist of upcoming executions and death penalty statistics for the United States.
  • The Death Penalty Information Center: Statistical information and studies
  • Amnesty International – Abolish the death penalty Campaign: Human Rights organisation
  • European Union: Information on anti-death penalty policies
  • International news on capital punishment
  • Death Penalty Focus: American group dedicated to abolishing the death penalty
  • Reprieve.org: United States-based volunteer program for foreign lawyers, students, and others to work at death penalty defense offices
  • American Civil Liberties Union: Demanding a Moratorium on the Death Penalty
  • National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
  • NSW Council for Civil Liberties 15 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine: an Australian organisation opposed to the Death Penalty in the Asian region
  • , a 1900 photograph by William M. Vander Weyde, accompanied by a poem by Jared Carter.
  • Lead prosecutor apologizes for role in sending man to death row Shreveport Times, 2015
  • James Haughton (1850). "On death punishments: a paper read before the Dublin Statistical Society". Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland. Dublin: Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland. hdl:2262/7759. ISSN 0081-4776. Wikidata Q28925851.

Religious views

  • The Dalai Lama
  • Buddhism & Capital Punishment from The Engaged Zen Society
  • Lists several Catholic links Priests for Life
  • by Kenneth R. Overberg, S.J., from AmericanCatholic.org
  • by Andy Prince, from Youth Update on AmericanCatholic.org
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Capital Punishment" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Catholics Against Capital Punishment: offers a Catholic perspective and provides resources and links
  • : Why The Death Penalty Is un-Islamic?

capital, punishment, confused, with, corporal, punishment, several, terms, redirect, here, other, uses, death, penalty, disambiguation, death, sentence, disambiguation, execution, disambiguation, disambiguation, also, known, death, penalty, formerly, called, j. Not to be confused with Corporal punishment Several terms redirect here For other uses see Death penalty disambiguation Death sentence disambiguation Execution disambiguation and Capital punishment disambiguation Capital punishment also known as the death penalty and formerly called judicial homicide 1 2 is the state sanctioned practice of deliberately killing a person as a punishment for an actual or supposed crime usually following an authorized rule governed process to conclude that the person is responsible for violating norms that warrant said punishment 3 The sentence ordering that an offender be punished in such a manner is known as a death sentence and the act of carrying out the sentence is known as an execution A prisoner who has been sentenced to death and awaits execution is condemned and is commonly referred to as being on death row Crimes that are punishable by death are known as capital crimes capital offences or capital felonies and vary depending on the jurisdiction but commonly include serious crimes against the person such as murder mass murder aggravated cases of rape often including child sexual abuse terrorism aircraft hijacking war crimes crimes against humanity and genocide along with crimes against the state such as attempting to overthrow government treason espionage sedition and piracy among other crimes Also in some cases acts of recidivism aggravated robbery and kidnapping in addition to drug trafficking drug dealing and drug possession are capital crimes or enhancements However states have also imposed punitive executions for an expansive range of conduct for political or religious beliefs and practices for a status beyond one s control or without employing any significant due process procedures 3 Judicial murder is the intentional and premeditated killing of an innocent person by means of capital punishment 4 For example the executions following the show trials in Russia during the Great Purge of 1937 1938 were an instrument of political repression Etymologically the term capital lit of the head derived via the Latin capitalis from caput head refers to execution by beheading 5 but executions are carried out by many methods including hanging shooting lethal injection stoning electrocution and gassing As of 2022 55 countries retain capital punishment 109 countries have completely abolished it de jure for all crimes seven have abolished it for ordinary crimes while maintaining it for special circumstances such as war crimes and 24 are abolitionist in practice 6 7 Although the majority of nations have abolished capital punishment over 60 of the world s population live in countries where the death penalty is retained such as China India the United States Singapore Indonesia Pakistan Bangladesh Nigeria Egypt Saudi Arabia Iran Japan and Taiwan 8 9 10 11 12 Capital punishment is controversial in several countries and states and positions can vary within a single political ideology or cultural region Amnesty International declares that the death penalty breaches human rights stating the right to life and the right to live free from torture or cruel inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment 13 These rights are protected under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the United Nations in 1948 13 In the European Union EU Article 2 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union prohibits the use of capital punishment 14 The Council of Europe which has 46 member states has sought to abolish the use of the death penalty by its members absolutely through Protocol 13 of the European Convention on Human Rights However this only affects those member states which have signed and ratified it and they do not include Armenia and Azerbaijan The United Nations General Assembly has adopted throughout the years from 2007 to 2020 15 eight non binding resolutions calling for a global moratorium on executions with a view to eventual abolition 16 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient history 1 2 Ancient Greece 1 3 Ancient Rome 1 4 China 1 5 Middle Ages 1 6 Enlightenment philosophy 1 7 Modern era 1 8 20th century 1 9 Contemporary era 2 History of abolition 3 Contemporary use 3 1 By country 3 2 Modern day public opinion 3 3 Juvenile offenders 3 4 Methods 3 5 Public execution 4 Capital crime 4 1 Crimes against humanity 4 2 Murder 4 3 Drug trafficking 4 4 Other offences 5 Controversy and debate 5 1 Retribution 5 2 Human rights 5 3 Non painful execution 5 4 Wrongful execution 5 5 Volunteers 5 6 Racial ethnic and social class bias 5 7 International views 5 8 Religious views 6 See also 7 Notes and references 7 1 Notes 7 1 1 Explanatory notes 7 1 2 References 7 2 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External links 9 1 In favour 9 2 Opposing 9 3 Religious viewsHistory Anarchist Auguste Vaillant about to be guillotined in France in 1894 Execution of criminals and dissidents has been used by nearly all societies since the beginning of civilizations on Earth 17 Until the nineteenth century without developed prison systems there was frequently no workable alternative to ensure deterrence and incapacitation of criminals 18 In pre modern times the executions themselves often involved torture with cruel and painful methods such as the breaking wheel keelhauling sawing hanging drawing and quartering burning at the stake flaying slow slicing boiling alive impalement mazzatello blowing from a gun schwedentrunk and scaphism Other methods which appear only in legend include the blood eagle and brazen bull The use of formal execution extends to the beginning of recorded history Most historical records and various primitive tribal practices indicate that the death penalty was a part of their justice system Communal punishments for wrongdoing generally included blood money compensation by the wrongdoer corporal punishment shunning banishment and execution In tribal societies compensation and shunning were often considered enough as a form of justice 19 The response to crimes committed by neighbouring tribes clans or communities included a formal apology compensation blood feuds and tribal warfare A blood feud or vendetta occurs when arbitration between families or tribes fails or an arbitration system is non existent This form of justice was common before the emergence of an arbitration system based on state or organized religion It may result from crime land disputes or a code of honour Acts of retaliation underscore the ability of the social collective to defend itself and demonstrate to enemies as well as potential allies that injury to property rights or the person will not go unpunished 20 In most countries that practise capital punishment it is now reserved for murder terrorism war crimes espionage treason or as part of military justice In some countries sexual crimes such as rape fornication adultery incest sodomy and bestiality carry the death penalty as do religious crimes such as Hudud Zina and Qisas crimes such as apostasy formal renunciation of the state religion blasphemy moharebeh hirabah Fasad Mofsed e filarz and witchcraft In many countries that use the death penalty drug trafficking and often drug possession is also a capital offence In China human trafficking and serious cases of corruption and financial crimes are punished by the death penalty In militaries around the world courts martial have imposed death sentences for offences such as cowardice desertion insubordination and mutiny 21 Ancient history The Christian Martyrs Last Prayer by Jean Leon Gerome 1883 Roman Circus Maximus Elaborations of tribal arbitration of feuds included peace settlements often done in a religious context and compensation system Compensation was based on the principle of substitution which might include material for example cattle slaves land compensation exchange of brides or grooms or payment of the blood debt Settlement rules could allow for animal blood to replace human blood or transfers of property or blood money or in some case an offer of a person for execution The person offered for execution did not have to be an original perpetrator of the crime because the social system was based on tribes and clans not individuals Blood feuds could be regulated at meetings such as the Norsemen things 22 Systems deriving from blood feuds may survive alongside more advanced legal systems or be given recognition by courts for example trial by combat or blood money One of the more modern refinements of the blood feud is the duel Beheading of John the Baptist woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld 1860 In certain parts of the world nations in the form of ancient republics monarchies or tribal oligarchies emerged These nations were often united by common linguistic religious or family ties Moreover expansion of these nations often occurred by conquest of neighbouring tribes or nations Consequently various classes of royalty nobility various commoners and slaves emerged Accordingly the systems of tribal arbitration were submerged into a more unified system of justice which formalized the relation between the different social classes rather than tribes The earliest and most famous example is Code of Hammurabi which set the different punishment and compensation according to the different class or group of victims and perpetrators The Torah Old Testament lays down the death penalty for murder 23 kidnapping practicing magic violation of the Sabbath blasphemy and a wide range of sexual crimes although evidence suggests that actual executions were exceedingly rare if they occurred at all 24 A further example comes from Ancient Greece where the Athenian legal system replacing customary oral law was first written down by Draco in about 621 BC the death penalty was applied for a particularly wide range of crimes though Solon later repealed Draco s code and published new laws retaining capital punishment only for intentional homicide and only with victim s family permission 25 The word draconian derives from Draco s laws The Romans also used the death penalty for a wide range of offences 26 Ancient Greece The Death of Socrates 1787 in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City Protagoras whose thought is reported by Plato criticizes the principle of revenge because once the damage is done it cannot be canceled by any action So if the death penalty is to be imposed by society it is only to protect the latter against the criminal or for a dissuasive purpose 27 The only right that Protagoras knows is therefore human right which established and sanctioned by a sovereign collectivity identifies itself with positive or the law in force of the city In fact it finds its guarantee in the death penalty which threatens all those who do not respect it 28 29 Plato for his part saw the death penalty as a means of purification because crimes are a defilement Thus in the Laws he considered necessary the execution of the animal or the destruction of the object which caused the death of a Man by accident For the murderers he considered that the act of homicide is not natural and is not fully consented by the criminal Homicide is thus a disease of the soul which must be reeducated as much as possible and as a last resort sentence to death if no rehabilitation is possible 30 According to Aristotle for whom free will is proper to man the citizen is responsible for his acts If there was a crime a judge must define the penalty allowing the crime to be annulled by compensating it This is how pecuniary compensation appeared for criminals the least recalcitrant and whose rehabilitation is deemed possible But for others the death penalty is necessary according to Aristotle 31 This philosophy aims on the one hand to protect society and on the other hand to compensate to cancel the consequences of the crime committed It inspired Western criminal law until the 17th century a time when the first reflections on the abolition of the death penalty appeared 32 Ancient Rome In ancient Rome the application of the death penalty against Roman citizens was unusual and considered exceptional They preferred alternative sentences ranging depending on the crime and the criminal from private or public reprimand to exile including the confiscation of his property or torture or even prison and as a last resort death A historic debate followed by a vote took place in the Roman Senate to decide the fate of Catiline s allies when he tried to take power in December 63 Then Roman consul argued in favor of the killing of conspirators without judgment by decision of the Senate Senatus consultum ultimum and was supported by the majority of senators among the minority voices opposed to the execution most notable was that of Julius Caesar 33 The custom was quite different for foreigners who were considered inferior to Roman citizens and especially for slaves who were considered transferrable property China Although many are executed in the People s Republic of China each year in the present day 34 there was a time in the Tang dynasty 618 907 when the death penalty was abolished 35 This was in the year 747 enacted by Emperor Xuanzong of Tang r 712 756 When abolishing the death penalty Xuanzong ordered his officials to refer to the nearest regulation by analogy when sentencing those found guilty of crimes for which the prescribed punishment was execution Thus depending on the severity of the crime a punishment of severe scourging with the thick rod or of exile to the remote Lingnan region might take the place of capital punishment However the death penalty was restored only 12 years later in 759 in response to the An Lushan Rebellion 36 At this time in the Tang dynasty only the emperor had the authority to sentence criminals to execution Under Xuanzong capital punishment was relatively infrequent with only 24 executions in the year 730 and 58 executions in the year 736 35 The two most common forms of execution in the Tang dynasty were strangulation and decapitation which were the prescribed methods of execution for 144 and 89 offences respectively Strangulation was the prescribed sentence for lodging an accusation against one s parents or grandparents with a magistrate scheming to kidnap a person and sell them into slavery and opening a coffin while desecrating a tomb Decapitation was the method of execution prescribed for more serious crimes such as treason and sedition Despite the great discomfort involved most of the Tang Chinese preferred strangulation to decapitation as a result of the traditional Tang Chinese belief that the body is a gift from the parents and that it is therefore disrespectful to one s ancestors to die without returning one s body to the grave intact Some further forms of capital punishment were practised in the Tang dynasty of which the first two that follow at least were extralegal clarification needed The first of these was scourging to death with the thick rod clarification needed which was common throughout the Tang dynasty especially in cases of gross corruption The second was truncation in which the convicted person was cut in two at the waist with a fodder knife and then left to bleed to death 37 A further form of execution called Ling Chi slow slicing or death by of a thousand cuts was used from the close of the Tang dynasty around 900 to its abolition in 1905 When a minister of the fifth grade or above received a death sentence the emperor might grant him a special dispensation allowing him to commit suicide in lieu of execution Even when this privilege was not granted the law required that the condemned minister be provided with food and ale by his keepers and transported to the execution ground in a cart rather than having to walk there Nearly all executions under the Tang dynasty took place in public as a warning to the population The heads of the executed were displayed on poles or spears When local authorities decapitated a convicted criminal the head was boxed and sent to the capital as proof of identity and that the execution had taken place 37 Middle Ages The breaking wheel was used during the Middle Ages and was still in use into the 19th century In medieval and early modern Europe before the development of modern prison systems the death penalty was also used as a generalized form of punishment for even minor offences citation needed In early modern Europe a massive moral panic regarding witchcraft swept across Europe and later the European colonies in North America During this period there were widespread claims that malevolent Satanic witches were operating as an organized threat to Christendom As a result tens of thousands of women were prosecuted for witchcraft and executed through the witch trials of the early modern period between the 15th and 18th centuries The burning of Jakob Rohrbach a leader of the peasants during the German Peasants War The death penalty also targeted sexual offences such as sodomy In the early history of Islam 7th 11th centuries there is a number of purported but mutually inconsistent reports athar regarding the punishments of sodomy ordered by some of the early caliphs 38 39 Abu Bakr the first caliph of the Rashidun Caliphate apparently recommended toppling a wall on the culprit or else burning him alive 39 while Ali ibn Abi Talib is said to have ordered death by stoning for one sodomite and had another thrown head first from the top of the highest building in the town according to Ibn Abbas the latter punishment must be followed by stoning 39 40 Other medieval Muslim leaders such as the Abbasid caliphs in Baghdad most notably al Mu tadid were often cruel in their punishments 41 page needed In early modern England the Buggery Act 1533 stipulated hanging as punishment for buggery James Pratt and John Smith were the last two Englishmen to be executed for sodomy in 1835 42 In 1636 the laws of Puritan governed Plymouth Colony included a sentence of death for sodomy and buggery 43 The Massachusetts Bay Colony followed in 1641 Throughout the 19th century U S states repealed death sentences from their sodomy laws with South Carolina being the last to do so in 1873 44 Historians recognize that during the Early Middle Ages the Christian populations living in the lands invaded by the Arab Muslim armies between the 7th and 10th centuries suffered religious discrimination religious persecution religious violence and martyrdom multiple times at the hands of Arab Muslim officials and rulers 45 46 As People of the Book Christians under Muslim rule were subjected to dhimmi status along with Jews Samaritans Gnostics Mandeans and Zoroastrians which was inferior to the status of Muslims 46 47 Christians and other religious minorities thus faced religious discrimination and religious persecution in that they were banned from proselytising for Christians it was forbidden to evangelize or spread Christianity in the lands invaded by the Arab Muslims on pain of death they were banned from bearing arms undertaking certain professions and were obligated to dress differently in order to distinguish themselves from Arabs 47 Under sharia Non Muslims were obligated to pay jizya and kharaj taxes 46 47 48 together with periodic heavy ransom levied upon Christian communities by Muslim rulers in order to fund military campaigns all of which contributed a significant proportion of income to the Islamic states while conversely reducing many Christians to poverty and these financial and social hardships forced many Christians to convert to Islam 47 Christians unable to pay these taxes were forced to surrender their children to the Muslim rulers as payment who would sell them as slaves to Muslim households where they were forced to convert to Islam 47 Many Christian martyrs were executed under the Islamic death penalty for defending their Christian faith through dramatic acts of resistance such as refusing to convert to Islam repudiation of the Islamic religion and subsequent reconversion to Christianity and blasphemy towards Muslim beliefs 45 Despite the wide use of the death penalty calls for reform were not unknown The 12th century Jewish legal scholar Moses Maimonides wrote It is better and more satisfactory to acquit a thousand guilty persons than to put a single innocent man to death He argued that executing an accused criminal on anything less than absolute certainty would lead to a slippery slope of decreasing burdens of proof until we would be convicting merely according to the judge s caprice Maimonides s concern was maintaining popular respect for law and he saw errors of commission as much more threatening than errors of omission 49 Enlightenment philosophy While during the Middle Ages the expiatory aspect of the death penalty was taken into account this is no longer the case under the Lumieres These define the place of man within society no longer according to a divine rule but as a contract established at birth between the citizen and the society it is the social contract From that moment on capital punishment should be seen as useful to society through its dissuasive effect but also as a means of protection of the latter vis a vis criminals 50 Modern era Antiporta of Dei delitti e delle pene On Crimes and Punishments 1766 ed In the last several centuries with the emergence of modern nation states justice came to be increasingly associated with the concept of natural and legal rights The period saw an increase in standing police forces and permanent penitential institutions Rational choice theory a utilitarian approach to criminology which justifies punishment as a form of deterrence as opposed to retribution can be traced back to Cesare Beccaria whose influential treatise On Crimes and Punishments 1764 was the first detailed analysis of capital punishment to demand the abolition of the death penalty 51 In England Jeremy Bentham 1748 1832 the founder of modern utilitarianism called for the abolition of the death penalty 52 Beccaria and later Charles Dickens and Karl Marx noted the incidence of increased violent criminality at the times and places of executions Official recognition of this phenomenon led to executions being carried out inside prisons away from public view In England in the 18th century when there was no police force Parliament drastically increased the number of capital offences to more than 200 These were mainly property offences for example cutting down a cherry tree in an orchard 53 In 1820 there were 160 including crimes such as shoplifting petty theft or stealing cattle 54 The severity of the so called Bloody Code was often tempered by juries who refused to convict or judges in the case of petty theft who arbitrarily set the value stolen at below the statutory level for a capital crime 55 20th century Mexican execution by firing squad 1916 In Nazi Germany there were three types of capital punishment hanging decapitation and death by shooting 56 Also modern military organisations employed capital punishment as a means of maintaining military discipline In the past cowardice absence without leave desertion insubordination shirking under enemy fire and disobeying orders were often crimes punishable by death see decimation and running the gauntlet One method of execution since firearms came into common use has also been firing squad although some countries use execution with a single shot to the head or neck 50 Poles tried and sentenced to death by a Standgericht in retaliation for the assassination of 1 German policeman in Nazi occupied Poland 1944 Various authoritarian states for example those with Fascist or Communist governments employed the death penalty as a potent means of political oppression citation needed According to Robert Conquest the leading expert on Joseph Stalin s purges more than one million Soviet citizens were executed during the Great Purge of 1937 38 almost all by a bullet to the back of the head 57 better source needed Mao Zedong publicly stated that 800 000 people had been executed in China during the Cultural Revolution 1966 1976 Partly as a response to such excesses civil rights organizations started to place increasing emphasis on the concept of human rights and an abolition of the death penalty citation needed Contemporary era By continent all European states but one have abolished capital punishment note 1 many Oceanian states have abolished it note 2 most states in the Americas have abolished its use note 3 while a few actively retain it note 4 less than half of countries in Africa retain it note 5 and the majority of countries in Asia retain it note 6 Abolition was often adopted due to political change as when countries shifted from authoritarianism to democracy or when it became an entry condition for the EU The United States is a notable exception some states have had bans on capital punishment for decades the earliest being Michigan where it was abolished in 1846 while other states still actively use it today The death penalty in the United States remains a contentious issue which is hotly debated In retentionist countries the debate is sometimes revived when a miscarriage of justice has occurred though this tends to cause legislative efforts to improve the judicial process rather than to abolish the death penalty In abolitionist countries the debate is sometimes revived by particularly brutal murders though few countries have brought it back after abolishing it However a spike in serious violent crimes such as murders or terrorist attacks has prompted some countries to effectively end the moratorium on the death penalty One notable example is Pakistan which in December 2014 lifted a six year moratorium on executions after the Peshawar school massacre during which 132 students and 9 members of staff of the Army Public School and Degree College Peshawar were killed by Tehrik i Taliban Pakistan terrorists a group distinct from the Afghan Taliban who condemned the attack 58 Since then Pakistan has executed over 400 convicts 59 In 2017 two major countries Turkey and the Philippines saw their executives making moves to reinstate the death penalty 60 In the same year passage of the law in the Philippines failed to obtain the Senate s approval 61 On 29 December 2021 after a 20 year moratorium the Kazakhstan government enacted the On Amendments and Additions to Certain Legislative Acts of the Republic of Kazakhstan on the Abolition of the Death Penalty signed by President Kassym Jomart Tokayev as part of series of Omnibus reformations of the Kazak legal system Listening State initiative citation needed History of abolitionSee also Use of capital punishment by country Abolition chronology Emperor Shōmu banned the death penalty in Japan in 724 In 724 AD in Japan the death penalty was banned during the reign of Emperor Shōmu but the abolition only lasted a few years 62 In 818 Emperor Saga abolished the death penalty under the influence of Shinto and it lasted until 1156 63 In China the death penalty was banned by Emperor Xuanzong of Tang in 747 replacing it with exile or scourging However the ban only lasted 12 years 62 Following his conversion to Christianity in 988 Vladimir the Great abolished the death penalty in Kievan Rus along with torture and mutilation corporal punishment was also seldom used 64 In England a public statement of opposition was included in The Twelve Conclusions of the Lollards written in 1395 Sir Thomas More s Utopia published in 1516 debated the benefits of the death penalty in dialogue form coming to no firm conclusion More was himself executed for treason in 1535 Peter Leopold II abolished the death penalty throughout Tuscany in 1786 making it the first nation in modern history to do so More recent opposition to the death penalty stemmed from the book of the Italian Cesare Beccaria Dei Delitti e Delle Pene On Crimes and Punishments published in 1764 In this book Beccaria aimed to demonstrate not only the injustice but even the futility from the point of view of social welfare of torture and the death penalty Influenced by the book Grand Duke Leopold II of Habsburg the future Emperor of Austria abolished the death penalty in the then independent Grand Duchy of Tuscany the first permanent abolition in modern times On 30 November 1786 after having de facto blocked executions the last was in 1769 Leopold promulgated the reform of the penal code that abolished the death penalty and ordered the destruction of all the instruments for capital execution in his land In 2000 Tuscany s regional authorities instituted an annual holiday on 30 November to commemorate the event The event is commemorated on this day by 300 cities around the world celebrating Cities for Life Day In the United Kingdom it was abolished for murder leaving only treason piracy with violence arson in royal dockyards and a number of wartime military offences as capital crimes for a five year experiment in 1965 and permanently in 1969 the last execution having taken place in 1964 It was abolished for all offences in 1998 65 Protocol 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights first entering into force in 2003 prohibits the death penalty in all circumstances for those states that are party to it including the United Kingdom from 2004 In the post classical Republic of Poljica life was ensured as a basic right in its Poljica Statute of 1440 The short lived revolutionary Roman Republic banned capital punishment in 1849 Venezuela followed suit and abolished the death penalty in 1863 66 and San Marino did so in 1865 The last execution in San Marino had taken place in 1468 In Portugal after legislative proposals in 1852 and 1863 the death penalty was abolished in 1867 The last execution in Brazil was 1876 from then on all the condemnations were commuted by the Emperor Pedro II until its abolition for civil offences and military offences in peacetime in 1891 The penalty for crimes committed in peacetime was then reinstated and abolished again twice 1938 1953 and 1969 1978 but on those occasions it was restricted to acts of terrorism or subversion considered internal warfare and all sentences were commuted and not carried out Abolition occurred in Canada in 1976 except for some military offences with complete abolition in 1998 in France in 1981 and in Australia in 1973 although the state of Western Australia retained the penalty until 1984 In South Australia under the premiership of then Premier Dunstan the Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 SA was modified so that the death sentence was changed to life imprisonment in 1976 In 1977 the United Nations General Assembly affirmed in a formal resolution that throughout the world it is desirable to progressively restrict the number of offences for which the death penalty might be imposed with a view to the desirability of abolishing this punishment 67 In the United States Michigan was the first state to ban the death penalty on 18 May 1846 68 The death penalty was declared unconstitutional between 1972 and 1976 based on the Furman v Georgia case but the 1976 Gregg v Georgia case once again permitted the death penalty under certain circumstances Further limitations were placed on the death penalty in Atkins v Virginia 2002 death penalty unconstitutional for people with an intellectual disability and Roper v Simmons 2005 death penalty unconstitutional if defendant was under age 18 at the time the crime was committed In the United States 23 states and the District of Columbia ban capital punishment Many countries have abolished capital punishment either in law or in practice Since World War II there has been a trend toward abolishing capital punishment Capital punishment has been completely abolished by 108 countries a further seven have done so for all offences except under special circumstances and 26 more have abolished it in practice because they have not used it for at least 10 years and are believed to have a policy or established practice against carrying out executions 69 Contemporary useBy country Main article Capital punishment by country Most nations including almost all developed countries have abolished capital punishment either in law or in practice notable exceptions are the United States Japan Taiwan Singapore and South Korea Additionally capital punishment is also carried out in China India and most Islamic states 70 71 72 73 74 75 Since World War II there has been a trend toward abolishing the death penalty 53 countries retain the death penalty in active use 111 countries have abolished capital punishment altogether 7 have done so for all offences except under special circumstances and 24 more have abolished it in practice because they have not used it for at least 10 years and are believed to have a policy or established practice against carrying out executions 6 According to Amnesty International 18 countries are known to have performed executions in 2020 7 There are countries which do not publish information on the use of capital punishment most significantly China and North Korea According to Amnesty International around 1 000 prisoners were executed in 2017 76 Amnesty reported in 2004 and 2009 that Singapore and Iraq respectively had the world s highest per capita execution rate 77 78 According to Al Jazeera and UN Special Rapporteur Ahmed Shaheed Iran has had the world s highest per capita execution rate 79 80 A 2012 EU report from the Directorate General for External Relations policy department pointed to Gaza as having the highest per capita execution rate in the MENA region 81 Abolitionist countries 111 Abolitionist in law countries for all crimes except those committed under exceptional circumstances such as crimes committed in wartime 7 Abolitionist in practice countries have not executed anyone during the past 10 years or more and are believed to have a policy or established practice of not carrying out executions 24 Retentionist countries 53 Number of abolitionist and retentionist countries by year Number of retentionist countries Number of abolitionist countries Country Total executed 2021 82 Iran 353 Egypt 82 Saudi Arabia 64 Syria 37 Somalia 22 Iraq 21 Yemen 17 United States 11 China 6 Bangladesh 3 Botswana 3 Japan 3 South Sudan 1 Vietnam Unknown North Korea Unknown A map showing U S states where the death penalty is authorized for certain crimes even if not recently used The death penalty is also authorized for certain federal and military crimes States with a valid death penalty statute States without the death penalty The use of the death penalty is becoming increasingly restrained in some retentionist countries including Taiwan and Singapore 83 better source needed Indonesia carried out no executions between November 2008 and March 2013 84 Singapore Japan and the United States are the only developed countries that are classified by Amnesty International as retentionist South Korea is classified as abolitionist in practice 85 86 Nearly all retentionist countries are situated in Asia Africa and the Caribbean 85 The only retentionist country in Europe is Belarus During the 1980s the democratisation of Latin America swelled the ranks of abolitionist countries citation needed This was soon followed by the fall of Communism in Europe Many of the countries which restored democracy aspired to enter the EU The EU and the Council of Europe both strictly require member states not to practise the death penalty see Capital punishment in Europe Public support for the death penalty in the EU varies 87 The last execution in a member state of the present day Council of Europe took place in 1997 in Ukraine 88 89 In contrast the rapid industrialisation in Asia has seen an increase in the number of developed countries which are also retentionist In these countries the death penalty retains strong public support and the matter receives little attention from the government or the media in China there is a small but significant and growing movement to abolish the death penalty altogether 90 This trend has been followed by some African and Middle Eastern countries where support for the death penalty remains high Some countries have resumed practising the death penalty after having previously suspended the practice for long periods The United States suspended executions in 1972 but resumed them in 1976 there was no execution in India between 1995 and 2004 and Sri Lanka declared an end to its moratorium on the death penalty on 20 November 2004 91 although it has not yet performed any further executions The Philippines re introduced the death penalty in 1993 after abolishing it in 1987 but again abolished it in 2006 92 The United States and Japan are the only developed countries to have recently carried out executions The U S federal government the U S military and 27 states have a valid death penalty statute and over 1 400 executions have been carried in the United States since it reinstated the death penalty in 1976 Japan has 106 inmates with finalized death sentences as of July 26 2022 update after executing Tomohiro Katō who was charged with killing seven and injured ten in Akihabara massacre in June 2008 93 The most recent country to abolish the death penalty was Kazakhstan on 2 January 2021 after a moratorium dating back 2 decades 94 95 According to an Amnesty International report released in April 2020 Egypt ranked regionally third and globally fifth among the countries that carried out most executions in 2019 The country increasingly became ignorant of international human rights concerns and criticism In March 2021 Egypt executed 11 prisoners in a jail who were convicted in cases of murder theft and shooting 96 According to Amnesty International s 2021 report at least 483 people were executed in 2020 despite the COVID 19 pandemic The figure excluded the countries that classify death penalty data as state secret The top five executioners for 2020 were China Iran Egypt Iraq and Saudi Arabia 97 Modern day public opinion The public opinion on the death penalty varies considerably by country and by the crime in question Countries where a majority of people are against execution include Norway where only 25 are in favour 98 Most French Finns and Italians also oppose the death penalty 99 A 2020 Gallup poll shows that 55 of Americans support the death penalty for an individual convicted of murder down from 60 in 2016 64 in 2010 65 in 2006 and 68 in 2001 100 101 102 103 In 2020 43 of Italians expressed support for the death penalty 104 105 106 In Taiwan polls and research have consistently shown strong support for the death penalty at 80 This includes a survey conducted by the National Development Council of Taiwan in 2016 showing that 88 of Taiwanese people disagree with abolishing the death penalty 107 108 109 Its continuation of the practice drew criticism from local rights groups 110 The support and sentencing of capital punishment has been growing in India in the 2010s 111 due to anger over several recent brutal cases of rape even though actual executions are comparatively rare 111 While support for the death penalty for murder is still high in China executions have dropped precipitously with 3 000 executed in 2012 versus 12 000 in 2002 112 A poll in South Africa where capital punishment is abolished found that 76 of millennial South Africans support re introduction of the death penalty due to increasing incidents of rape and murder 113 114 A 2017 poll found younger Mexicans are more likely to support capital punishment than older ones 115 57 of Brazilians support the death penalty The age group that shows the greatest support for execution of those condemned is the 25 to 34 year old category in which 61 say they are in favor 116 Juvenile offenders See also Category Executed juvenile offenders The death penalty for juvenile offenders criminals aged under 18 years at the time of their crime although the legal or accepted definition of juvenile offender may vary from one jurisdiction to another has become increasingly rare Considering the age of majority is not 18 in some countries or has not been clearly defined in law since 1990 ten countries have executed offenders who were considered juveniles at the time of their crimes The People s Republic of China PRC Bangladesh Democratic Republic of Congo Iran Iraq Japan Nigeria Pakistan Saudi Arabia Sudan the United States and Yemen 117 China Pakistan the United States Yemen and Saudi Arabia have since raised the minimum age to 18 118 119 Amnesty International has recorded 61 verified executions since then in several countries of both juveniles and adults who had been convicted of committing their offences as juveniles 120 The PRC does not allow for the execution of those under 18 but child executions have reportedly taken place 121 Mother Catherine Cauches center and her two daughters Guillemine Gilbert left and Perotine Massey right with her infant son burning for heresy One of the youngest children ever to be executed was the infant son of Perotine Massey on or around 18 July 1556 His mother was one of the Guernsey Martyrs who was executed for heresy and his father had previously fled the island At less than one day old he was ordered to be burned by Bailiff Hellier Gosselin with the advice of priests nearby who said the boy should burn due to having inherited moral stain from his mother who had given birth during her execution 122 Starting from 1642 in Colonial America until the present day in the United States an estimated 365 123 juvenile offenders were executed by various colonial authorities and after the American Revolution the federal government 124 The U S Supreme Court abolished capital punishment for offenders under the age of 16 in Thompson v Oklahoma 1988 and for all juveniles in Roper v Simmons 2005 In Prussia children under the age of 14 were exempted from the death penalty in 1794 125 Capital punishment was cancelled by the Electorate of Bavaria in 1751 for children under the age of 11 126 and by the Kingdom of Bavaria in 1813 for children and youth under 16 years 127 In Prussia the exemption was extended to youth under the age of 16 in 1851 128 For the first time all juveniles were excluded for the death penalty by the North German Confederation in 1871 129 which was continued by the German Empire in 1872 130 In Nazi Germany capital punishment was reinstated for juveniles between 16 and 17 years in 1939 131 This was broadened to children and youth from age 12 to 17 in 1943 132 The death penalty for juveniles was abolished by West Germany also generally in 1949 and by East Germany in 1952 In the Hereditary Lands Austrian Silesia Bohemia and Moravia within the Habsburg monarchy capital punishment for children under the age of 11 was no longer foreseen by 1770 133 The death penalty was also for juveniles nearly abolished in 1787 except for emergency or military law which is unclear in regard of those It was reintroduced for juveniles above 14 years by 1803 134 and was raised by general criminal law to 20 years in 1852 135 and this exemption 136 and the alike one of military law in 1855 137 which may have been up to 14 years in wartime 138 were also introduced into all of the Austrian Empire In the Helvetic Republic the death penalty for children and youth under the age of 16 was abolished in 1799 139 yet the country was already dissolved in 1803 whereas the law could remain in force if it was not replaced on cantonal level In the canton of Bern all juveniles were exempted from the death penalty at least in 1866 140 In Fribourg capital punishment was generally including for juveniles abolished by 1849 In Ticino it was abolished for youth and young adults under the age of 20 in 1816 141 In Zurich the exclusion from the death penalty was extended for juveniles and young adults up to 19 years of age by 1835 142 In 1942 the death penalty was almost deleted in criminal law as well for juveniles but since 1928 persisted in military law during wartime for youth above 14 years 143 If no earlier change was made in the given subject by 1979 juveniles could no longer be subject to the death penalty in military law during wartime 144 Between 2005 and May 2008 Iran Pakistan Saudi Arabia Sudan and Yemen were reported to have executed child offenders the largest number occurring in Iran 145 During Hassan Rouhani s tenure as president of Iran from 2013 until 2021 at least 3 602 death sentences have been carried out This includes the executions of 34 juvenile offenders 146 147 The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child which forbids capital punishment for juveniles under article 37 a has been signed by all countries and subsequently ratified by all signatories with the exception of the United States despite the US Supreme Court decisions abolishing the practice 148 The UN Sub Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights maintains that the death penalty for juveniles has become contrary to a jus cogens of customary international law A majority of countries are also party to the U N International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights whose Article 6 5 also states that Sentence of death shall not be imposed for crimes committed by persons below eighteen years of age Iran despite its ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights was the world s largest executioner of juvenile offenders for which it has been the subject of broad international condemnation the country s record is the focus of the Stop Child Executions Campaign But on 10 February 2012 Iran s parliament changed controversial laws relating to the execution of juveniles In the new legislation the age of 18 solar year would be applied to accused of both genders and juvenile offenders must be sentenced pursuant to a separate law specifically dealing with juveniles 118 119 Based on the Islamic law which now seems to have been revised girls at the age of 9 and boys at 15 of lunar year 11 days shorter than a solar year are deemed fully responsible for their crimes 118 Iran accounted for two thirds of the global total of such executions and currently needs update has approximately 140 people considered as juveniles awaiting execution for crimes committed up from 71 in 2007 149 150 The past executions of Mahmoud Asgari Ayaz Marhoni and Makwan Moloudzadeh became the focus of Iran s child capital punishment policy and the judicial system that hands down such sentences 151 152 Saudi Arabia also executes criminals who were minors at the time of the offence 153 154 In 2013 Saudi Arabia was the center of an international controversy after it executed Rizana Nafeek a Sri Lankan domestic worker who was believed to have been 17 years old at the time of the crime 155 Saudi Arabia banned execution for minors except for terrorism cases in April 2020 156 Japan has not executed juvenile criminals after August 1997 when they executed Norio Nagayama a spree killer who had been convicted of shooting four people dead in the late 1960s Nagayama s case created the eponymously named Nagayama standards which take into account factors such as the number of victims brutality and social impact of the crimes The standards have been used in determining whether to apply the death sentence in murder cases Teruhiko Seki convicted of murdering four family members including a 4 year old daughter and raping a 15 year old daughter of a family in 1992 became the second inmate to be hanged for a crime committed as a minor in the first such execution in 20 years after Nagayama on 19 December 2017 157 Takayuki Otsuki who was convicted of raping and strangling a 23 year old woman and subsequently strangling her 11 month old daughter to death on 14 April 1999 when he was 18 is another inmate sentenced to death and his request for retrial has been rejected by the Supreme Court of Japan 158 There is evidence that child executions are taking place in the parts of Somalia controlled by the Islamic Courts Union ICU In October 2008 a girl Aisha Ibrahim Dhuhulow was buried up to her neck at a football stadium then stoned to death in front of more than 1 000 people Somalia s established Transitional Federal Government announced in November 2009 reiterated in 2013 159 that it plans to ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child This move was lauded by UNICEF as a welcome attempt to secure children s rights in the country 160 Methods Main article List of methods of capital punishment The Red Guard prisoners are being executed by the Whites in Varkaus North Savonia during the 1918 Finnish Civil War The following methods of execution have been used by various countries 161 162 163 164 165 Hanging Afghanistan Iran Iraq Japan South Korea Malaysia Nigeria Sudan Pakistan Palestinian National Authority Israel Yemen Egypt India Myanmar Singapore Sri Lanka Syria UAE Zimbabwe Malawi Liberia Shooting the People s Republic of China Republic of China Vietnam Belarus Ethiopia Nigeria Somalia North Korea Indonesia UAE Saudi Arabia Bahrain Qatar Yemen and in the US states of Oklahoma and Utah Lethal injection United States Guatemala Thailand the People s Republic of China Vietnam Beheading Saudi Arabia Stoning Nigeria Sudan Electrocution and gas inhalation some U S states but only if the prisoner requests it or if lethal injection is unavailable Inert gas asphyxiation Some U S states Oklahoma Mississippi Alabama Public execution Main article Public execution A public execution is a form of capital punishment which members of the general public may voluntarily attend This definition excludes the presence of a small number of witnesses randomly selected to assure executive accountability 166 While today the great majority of the world considers public executions to be distasteful and most countries have outlawed the practice throughout much of history executions were performed publicly as a means for the state to demonstrate its power before those who fell under its jurisdiction be they criminals enemies or political opponents Additionally it afforded the public a chance to witness what was considered a great spectacle 167 Social historians note that beginning in the 20th century in the U S and western Europe death in general became increasingly shielded from public view occurring more and more behind the closed doors of the hospital 168 Executions were likewise moved behind the walls of the penitentiary 168 The last formal public executions occurred in 1868 in Britain in 1936 in the U S and in 1939 in France 168 According to Amnesty International in 2012 public executions were known to have been carried out in Iran North Korea Saudi Arabia and Somalia 169 There have been reports of public executions carried out by state and non state actors in Hamas controlled Gaza Syria Iraq Afghanistan and Yemen 170 171 172 Executions which can be classified as public were also carried out in the U S states of Florida and Utah as of 1992 update 166 Capital crime Capital crimes redirects here For the novel see Capital Crimes Crimes against humanity Crimes against humanity such as genocide are usually punishable by death in countries retaining capital punishment citation needed Death sentences for such crimes were handed down and carried out during the Nuremberg Trials in 1946 and the Tokyo Trials in 1948 but the current International Criminal Court does not use capital punishment The maximum penalty available to the International Criminal Court is life imprisonment 173 Murder Intentional homicide is punishable by death in most countries retaining capital punishment but generally provided it involves an aggravating factor required by statute or judicial precedents citation needed Some countries like Singapore and Malaysia made the death penalty mandatory for murder though Singapore later changed its laws since 2013 to reserve the mandatory death sentence for intentional murder while providing an alternative sentence of life imprisonment with without caning for murder with no intention to cause death which allowed some convicted murderers on death row in Singapore including Kho Jabing to apply for the reduction of their death sentences after the courts in Singapore confirmed that they committed murder without the intention to kill and thus eligible for re sentencing under the new death penalty laws in Singapore 174 175 In 2019 Malaysia considered abolishing the death penalty but instead abolished mandatory death sentences any death sentence is now passed at the judge s discretion 176 In June 2022 Malaysian law minister Wan Junaidi pledged to abolish capital punishment and replace it with other punishments at the discretion of the court 177 Drug trafficking Main article Capital punishment for drug trafficking A sign at the Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport warns arriving travelers that drug trafficking is a capital crime in the Republic of China photo taken in 2005 In 2018 at least 35 countries retained the death penalty for drug trafficking drug dealing drug possession and related offences 178 People are regularly sentenced to death and executed for drug related offences in China Indonesia Iran Malaysia Saudi Arabia Singapore and Vietnam 178 Other countries may retain the death penalty for symbolic purposes 178 The death penalty is mandated for drug trafficking in Singapore and Malaysia though since 2013 Singapore ruled that those who were certified to have diminished responsibility e g Major depressive disorder or acting as drug couriers and had assisted the authorities in tackling drug related activities will be sentenced to life imprisonment instead of death with the offender liable to at least 15 strokes of the cane if he was not sentenced to death and was simultaneously sentenced to caning as well 174 175 Notable drug couriers include Yong Vui Kong whose death sentence was replaced with a life sentence and 15 strokes of the cane in November 2013 179 A famous example of drug related execution pertains to members of the Bali Nine Other offences See also Capital punishment for non violent offenses and Capital punishment by country Other crimes that are punishable by death in some countries include Terrorism Treason a capital crime in most countries that retain capital punishment Espionage Crimes against the state such as attempting to overthrow government most countries with the death penalty Political protests Saudi Arabia 180 Rape China India Pakistan Bangladesh Iran Saudi Arabia UAE Qatar Brunei etc Economic crimes China Iran Human trafficking China Corruption China Iran Kidnapping China Bangladesh the US states of Georgia 181 and Idaho 182 etc Separatism China Unlawful sexual behaviour Saudi Arabia Iran UAE Qatar Brunei Nigeria etc Religious Hudud offences such as apostasy Saudi Arabia Iran Afghanistan etc Blasphemy Saudi Arabia Iran Pakistan certain states in Nigeria Moharebeh Iran Drinking alcohol Iran Witchcraft and sorcery Saudi Arabia 183 184 Arson Algeria Tunisia Mali Mauritania etc Hirabah brigandage armed and or aggravated robbery Algeria Saudi Arabia Iran Kenya Zambia Ghana Ethiopia the US state of Georgia 185 etc 186 Controversy and debateSee also Capital punishment debate in the United States Death penalty opponents regard the death penalty as inhumane 187 and criticize it for its irreversibility 188 They argue also that capital punishment lacks deterrent effect 189 190 191 or has a brutalization effect 192 193 discriminates against minorities and the poor and that it encourages a culture of violence 194 There are many organizations worldwide such as Amnesty International 195 and country specific such as the American Civil Liberties Union ACLU that have abolition of the death penalty as its main purpose 196 197 Advocates of the death penalty argue that it deters crime 198 199 is a good tool for police and prosecutors in plea bargaining 200 makes sure that convicted criminals do not offend again and that it ensures justice for crimes such as homicide where other penalties will not inflict the desired retribution demanded by the crime itself Capital punishment for non lethal crimes is usually considerably more controversial and abolished in many of the countries that retain it 201 202 Retribution See also Revenge Revenge dynamics Execution of a war criminal in Germany in 1946 Supporters of the death penalty argued that death penalty is morally justified when applied in murder especially with aggravating elements such as for murder of police officers child murder torture murder multiple homicide and mass killing such as terrorism massacre and genocide This argument is strongly defended by New York Law School s Professor Robert Blecker 203 who says that the punishment must be painful in proportion to the crime Eighteenth century philosopher Immanuel Kant defended a more extreme position according to which every murderer deserves to die on the grounds that loss of life is incomparable to any penalty that allows them to remain alive including life imprisonment 204 Some abolitionists argue that retribution is simply revenge and cannot be condoned Others while accepting retribution as an element of criminal justice nonetheless argue that life without parole is a sufficient substitute It is also argued that the punishing of a killing with another death is a relatively unusual punishment for a violent act because in general violent crimes are not punished by subjecting the perpetrator to a similar act e g rapists are typically not punished by corporal punishment although it may be inflicted in Singapore for example 205 Human rights Abolitionists believe capital punishment is the worst violation of human rights because the right to life is the most important and capital punishment violates it without necessity and inflicts to the condemned a psychological torture Human rights activists oppose the death penalty calling it cruel inhuman and degrading punishment Amnesty International considers it to be the ultimate irreversible denial of Human Rights 206 Albert Camus wrote in a 1956 book called Reflections on the Guillotine Resistance Rebellion amp Death An execution is not simply death It is just as different from the privation of life as a concentration camp is from prison For there to be an equivalency the death penalty would have to punish a criminal who had warned his victim of the date at which he would inflict a horrible death on him and who from that moment onward had confined him at his mercy for months Such a monster is not encountered in private life 207 In the classic doctrine of natural rights as expounded by for instance Locke and Blackstone on the other hand it is an important idea that the right to life can be forfeited as most other rights can be given due process is observed such as the right to property and the right to freedom including provisionally in anticipation of an actual verdict 208 As John Stuart Mill explained in a speech given in Parliament against an amendment to abolish capital punishment for murder in 1868 And we may imagine somebody asking how we can teach people not to inflict suffering by ourselves inflicting it But to this I should answer all of us would answer that to deter by suffering from inflicting suffering is not only possible but the very purpose of penal justice Does fining a criminal show want of respect for property or imprisoning him for personal freedom Just as unreasonable is it to think that to take the life of a man who has taken that of another is to show want of regard for human life We show on the contrary most emphatically our regard for it by the adoption of a rule that he who violates that right in another forfeits it for himself and that while no other crime that he can commit deprives him of his right to live this shall 209 In one of the most recent cases relating to the death penalty in Singapore activists like Jolovan Wham Kirsten Han and Kokila Annamalai and even the international groups like the United Nations and European Union argued for Malaysian drug trafficker Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam who has been on death row at Singapore s Changi Prison since 2010 should not be executed due to an alleged intellectual disability as they argued that Nagaenthran has low IQ of 69 and a psychiatrist has assessed him to be mentally impaired to an extent that he should not be held liable to his crime and execution They also cited international law where a country should be prohibiting the execution of mentally and intellectually impaired people in order to push for Singapore to commute Nagaenthran s death penalty to life imprisonment based on protection of human rights However the Singapore government and both Singapore s High Court and Court of Appeal maintained their firm stance that despite his certified low IQ it is confirmed that Nagaenthran is not mentally or intellectually disabled based on the joint opinion of three government psychiatrists as he is able to fully understand the magnitude of his actions and has no problem in his daily functioning of life 210 211 212 Despite the international outcry Nagaenthran was executed on 27 April 2022 213 Non painful execution Further information Cruel and unusual punishment A gurney at San Quentin State Prison in California formerly used for executions by lethal injection Trends in most of the world have long been to move to private and less painful executions France developed the guillotine for this reason in the final years of the 18th century while Britain banned hanging drawing and quartering in the early 19th century Hanging by turning the victim off a ladder or by kicking a stool or a bucket which causes death by strangulation was replaced by long drop hanging where the subject is dropped a longer distance to dislocate the neck and sever the spinal cord Mozaffar ad Din Shah Qajar Shah of Persia 1896 1907 introduced throat cutting and blowing from a gun close range cannon fire as quick and relatively painless alternatives to more torturous methods of executions used at that time 214 In the United States electrocution and gas inhalation were introduced as more humane alternatives to hanging but have been almost entirely superseded by lethal injection A small number of countries for example Iran and Saudi Arabia still employ slow hanging methods decapitation and stoning A study of executions carried out in the United States between 1977 and 2001 indicated that at least 34 of the 749 executions or 4 5 involved unanticipated problems or delays that caused at least arguably unnecessary agony for the prisoner or that reflect gross incompetence of the executioner The rate of these botched executions remained steady over the period of the study 215 A separate study published in The Lancet in 2005 found that in 43 of cases of lethal injection the blood level of hypnotics was insufficient to guarantee unconsciousness 216 However the U S Supreme Court ruled in 2008 Baze v Rees and again in 2015 Glossip v Gross that lethal injection does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment 217 In Bucklew v Precythe the majority verdict written by Judge Neil Gorsuch further affirmed this principle stating that while the ban on cruel and unusual punishment affirmatively bans penalties that deliberately inflict pain and degradation it does in no sense limit the possible infliction of pain in the execution of a capital verdict 218 Wrongful execution Main article Wrongful execution See also List of wrongful convictions in the United States Capital punishment was abolished in the United Kingdom in part because of the case of Timothy Evans who was executed in 1950 after being wrongfully convicted of two murders that had in fact been committed by his landlord John Christie The case was considered vital in bolstering opposition which limited the scope of the penalty in 1957 and abolished it completely for murder in 1965 It is frequently argued that capital punishment leads to miscarriage of justice through the wrongful execution of innocent persons 219 Many people have been proclaimed innocent victims of the death penalty 220 221 222 Some have claimed that as many as 39 executions have been carried out in the face of compelling evidence of innocence or serious doubt about guilt in the US from 1992 through 2004 Newly available DNA evidence prevented the pending execution of more than 15 death row inmates during the same period in the US 223 but DNA evidence is only available in a fraction of capital cases 224 As of 2017 update 159 prisoners on death row have been exonerated by DNA or other evidence which is seen as an indication that innocent prisoners have almost certainly been executed 225 226 The National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty claims that between 1976 and 2015 1 414 prisoners in the United States have been executed while 156 sentenced to death have had their death sentences vacated 227 It is impossible to assess how many have been wrongly executed since courts do not generally investigate the innocence of a dead defendant and defense attorneys tend to concentrate their efforts on clients whose lives can still be saved however there is strong evidence of innocence in many cases 228 Improper procedure may also result in unfair executions For example Amnesty International argues that in Singapore the Misuse of Drugs Act contains a series of presumptions which shift the burden of proof from the prosecution to the accused This conflicts with the universally guaranteed right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty 229 Singapore s Misuse of Drugs Act presumes one is guilty of possession of drugs if as examples one is found to be present or escaping from a location proved or presumed to be used for the purpose of smoking or administering a controlled drug if one is in possession of a key to a premises where drugs are present if one is in the company of another person found to be in possession of illegal drugs or if one tests positive after being given a mandatory urine drug screening Urine drug screenings can be given at the discretion of police without requiring a search warrant The onus is on the accused in all of the above situations to prove that they were not in possession of or consumed illegal drugs 230 Volunteers Main article Volunteer capital punishment Some prisoners have volunteered or attempted to expedite capital punishment often by waiving all appeals Prisoners have made requests or committed further crimes in prison as well In the United States execution volunteers constitute approximately 11 of prisoners on death row Volunteers often bypass legal procedures which are designed to designate the death penalty for the worst of the worst offenders Opponents of execution volunteering cited the prevalence of mental illness among volunteers comparing it to suicide Execution volunteers have received considerably less attention and effort at legal reform than those who were exonerated after execution 231 Racial ethnic and social class bias Opponents of the death penalty argue that this punishment is being used more often against perpetrators from racial and ethnic minorities and from lower socioeconomic backgrounds than against those criminals who come from a privileged background and that the background of the victim also influences the outcome 232 233 234 Researchers have shown that white Americans are more likely to support the death penalty when told that it is mostly applied to black Americans 235 and that more stereotypically black looking or darkskinned defendants are more likely to be sentenced to death if the case involves a white victim 236 However a study published in 2018 failed to replicate the findings of earlier studies that had concluded that white Americans are more likely to support the death penalty if informed that it is largely applied to black Americans according to the authors their findings may result from changes since 2001 in the effects of racial stimuli on white attitudes about the death penalty or their willingness to express those attitudes in a survey context 237 In Alabama in 2019 a death row inmate named Domineque Ray was denied his imam in the room during his execution instead only offered a Christian chaplain 238 After filing a complaint a federal court of appeals ruled 5 4 against Ray s request The majority cited the last minute nature of the request and the dissent stated that the treatment went against the core principle of denominational neutrality 238 In July 2019 two Shiite men Ali Hakim al Arab 25 and Ahmad al Malali 24 were executed in Bahrain despite the protests from the United Nations and rights group Amnesty International stated that the executions were being carried out on confessions of terrorism crimes that were obtained through torture 239 On 30 March 2022 despite the appeals by the United Nations and rights activists 68 year old Malay Singaporean Abdul Kahar Othman was hanged at Singapore s Changi Prison for illegally trafficking diamorphine which marked the first execution in Singapore since 2019 as a result of an informal moratorium caused by the COVID 19 pandemic Earlier there were appeals made to advocate for Abdul Kahar s death penalty be commuted to life imprisonment on humanitarian grounds as Abdul Kahar came from a poor family and has struggled with drug addiction He was also revealed to have been spending most of his life going in and out of prison including a ten year sentence of preventive detention from 1995 to 2005 and has not been given much time for rehabilitation which made the activists and groups arguing that Abdul Kahar should be given a chance for rehabilitation instead of subjecting him to execution 240 241 242 Both the European Union EU and Amnesty International criticised Singapore for finalizing and carrying out Abdul Kahar s execution and about 400 Singaporeans protested against the government s use of the death penalty merely days after Abdul Kahar s death sentence was authorised 243 244 245 211 Still over 80 of the public supported the use of the death penalty in Singapore 246 International views Same sex intercourse illegal Death penalty for homosexuality Death penalty in legislation but not applied The United Nations introduced a resolution during the General Assembly s 62nd sessions in 2007 calling for a universal ban 247 248 The approval of a draft resolution by the Assembly s third committee which deals with human rights issues voted 99 to 52 with 33 abstentions in favour of the resolution on 15 November 2007 and was put to a vote in the Assembly on 18 December 249 250 251 Again in 2008 a large majority of states from all regions adopted on 20 November in the UN General Assembly Third Committee a second resolution calling for a moratorium on the use of the death penalty 105 countries voted in favour of the draft resolution 48 voted against and 31 abstained A range of amendments proposed by a small minority of pro death penalty countries were overwhelmingly defeated It had in 2007 passed a non binding resolution by 104 to 54 with 29 abstentions by asking its member states for a moratorium on executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty 252 Article 2 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union affirms the prohibition on capital punishment in the EU A number of regional conventions prohibit the death penalty most notably the Sixth Protocol abolition in time of peace and the 13th Protocol abolition in all circumstances to the European Convention on Human Rights The same is also stated under the Second Protocol in the American Convention on Human Rights which however has not been ratified by all countries in the Americas most notably Canada 253 and the United States Most relevant operative international treaties do not require its prohibition for cases of serious crime most notably the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights This instead has in common with several other treaties an optional protocol prohibiting capital punishment and promoting its wider abolition 254 Several international organizations have made abolition of the death penalty during time of peace or in all circumstances a requirement of membership most notably the EU and the Council of Europe The Council of Europe are willing to accept a moratorium as an interim measure Thus while Russia was a member of the Council of Europe and the death penalty remains codified in its law it has not made use of it since becoming a member of the council Russia has not executed anyone since 1996 With the exception of Russia abolitionist in practice and Belarus retentionist all European countries are classified as abolitionist 85 Latvia abolished de jure the death penalty for war crimes in 2012 becoming the last EU member to do so 255 Protocol no 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights calls for the abolition of the death penalty in all circumstances including for war crimes The majority of European countries have signed and ratified it Some European countries have not done this but all of them except Belarus have now abolished the death penalty in all circumstances de jure and Russia de facto Poland is the most recent country to ratify the protocol on 28 August 2013 256 Protocol no 6 which prohibits the death penalty during peacetime has been ratified by all members of the Council of Europe It had been signed but not ratified by Russia at the time of its expulsion in 2022 Signatories to the Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR parties in dark green signatories in light green non members in grey There are also other international abolitionist instruments such as the Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights which has 90 parties 257 and the Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights to Abolish the Death Penalty for the Americas ratified by 13 states 258 In Turkey over 500 people were sentenced to death after the 1980 Turkish coup d etat About 50 of them were executed the last one 25 October 1984 Then there was a de facto moratorium on the death penalty in Turkey As a move towards EU membership Turkey made some legal changes The death penalty was removed from peacetime law by the National Assembly in August 2002 and in May 2004 Turkey amended its constitution to remove capital punishment in all circumstances It ratified Protocol no 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights in February 2006 citation needed As a result Europe is a continent free of the death penalty in practice all states having ratified the Sixth Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights with the exceptions of Russia which has entered a moratorium and Belarus which are not members of the Council of Europe citation needed The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has been lobbying for Council of Europe observer states who practise the death penalty the U S and Japan to abolish it or lose their observer status In addition to banning capital punishment for EU member states the EU has also banned detainee transfers in cases where the receiving party may seek the death penalty citation needed Sub Saharan African countries that have recently abolished the death penalty include Burundi which abolished the death penalty for all crimes in 2009 259 and Gabon which did the same in 2010 260 On 5 July 2012 Benin became part of the Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ICCPR which prohibits the use of the death penalty 261 The newly created South Sudan is among the 111 UN member states that supported the resolution passed by the United Nations General Assembly that called for the removal of the death penalty therefore affirming its opposition to the practice South Sudan however has not yet abolished the death penalty and stated that it must first amend its Constitution and until that happens it will continue to use the death penalty 262 Among non governmental organizations NGOs Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are noted for their opposition to capital punishment 263 264 A number of such NGOs as well as trade unions local councils and bar associations formed a World Coalition Against the Death Penalty in 2002 265 An open letter led by Danish Member of the European Parliament Karen Melchior was sent to the European Commission ahead of the 26 January 2021 meeting of the Bahraini Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zayani with the members of the European Union for the signing of a Cooperation Agreement A total of 16 MEPs undersigned the letter expressing their grave concern towards the extended abuse of human rights in Bahrain following the arbitrary arrest and detention of activists and critics of the government The attendees of the meeting were requested to demand from their Bahraini counterparts to take into consideration the concerns raised by the MEPs particularly for the release of Abdulhadi Al Khawaja and Sheikh Mohammed Habib Al Muqdad the two European Bahraini dual citizens on death row 266 267 Religious views Main article Religion and capital punishment The world s major faiths have differing views depending on the religion denomination sect and or the individual adherent As an example the world s largest Christian denomination Catholicism has traditionally supported capital punishment as a necessary evil but in modern times opposes capital punishment in all cases 268 269 Pope John Paul II made a public address in St Louis Missouri in 1999 reminding the members of the Catholic Church to be unconditionally pro life and uphold the dignity of all persons even if in the eyes of the government they forfeited those rights by their own conduct 270 Early theologians of the Church such as Saint Augustine and Saint Thomas Aquinas seem to uphold the use of capital punishment only to the extent that it is not used in malice or frustration but in the interest of dissuading imitators of the evil conducted to warrant punishment originally 271 As time goes on the authority of the church has continued to develop with only slight variation a more universal rule that suggests the rare use of capital punishment specifically the death penalty is so rare as to be generally non viable The grounds for this trend lie most often in the existing trend of capital punishment propagating revenge more than true justice 272 Both the Bahaʼi and Islamic faiths support capital punishment 273 274 See alsoDeath in custody Execution chamber Executioner Judicial dissolution sometimes referred to as the corporate death penalty The Death Penalty Opposing Viewpoints book Shame culture Guilt shame fear spectrum of cultures Last meal Capital punishment in JudaismNotes and referencesNotes Explanatory notes Belarus including Australia and New Zealand Most Latin American states and Canada have completely abolished capital punishment while a few such as Brazil and Guatemala allow for it only in exceptional situations such as treason committed during wartime The United States and some Caribbean countries For example South Africa abolished the death penalty in 1995 while Botswana and Zambia retain it For example China Japan and India actively retain it References Shipley Maynard 1906 The Abolition of Capital Punishment in Italy and San Marino American Law Review 40 2 240 251 via HeinOnline Grann David 3 April 2018 Killers of the Flower Moon The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI Vintage Books p 153 ISBN 978 0 307 74248 3 OCLC 993996600 a b Capital Punishment in Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy access date December 4 2022 Fowler H W 14 October 2010 A Dictionary of Modern English Usage The Classic First Edition OUP Oxford p 310 ISBN 978 0 19 161511 5 Kronenwetter 2001 p 202 a b Abolitionist and Retentionist Countries as of July 2018 PDF Amnesty International Archived from the original PDF on 8 April 2021 Retrieved 3 December 2018 a b Death Sentences and Executions 2020 PDF 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2014 Burundi abolishes the death penalty but bans homosexuality Amnesty International Amnesty org Archived from the original on 18 February 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2014 Death Penalty Hands Off Cain Announces Abolition in Gabon Handsoffcain info Archived from the original on 25 February 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2014 HANDS OFF CAIN against death penalty in the world Handsoffcain info Archived from the original on 25 February 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2014 South Sudan says death penalty remains until constitution amended Sudan Tribune Plural news and views on Sudan Sudan Tribune Archived from the original on 28 February 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2014 Death Penalty Amnesty International Retrieved 1 September 2021 Lebanon Don t Resurrect the Death Penalty Human Rights Watch 10 October 2010 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 1 September 2021 Human Rights Watch opposes the death penalty in all cases as a violation of fundamental rights the right to life and the right not to be subjected to cruel inhuman and degrading punishment Presentation amp History WCADP Retrieved 1 September 2021 16 MEPs Urge Bahrain to Release EU Bahraini Dual Nationals and End Death Penalty Ahead of Brussels Meeting Americans for Democracy amp Human Rights in Bahrain 25 January 2021 Retrieved 25 January 2021 Letter from MEPs on Human Rights Abuses in Bahrain in Light of EU Cooperation Agreement PDF European Parliament Archived PDF from the original on 10 October 2022 Retrieved 22 January 2021 Death Penalty Development A Conditional Advance of Justice catholicmoraltheology com Slater S J Thomas 1925 Book 6 Part V The Fifth Commandment A manual of moral theology for English speaking countries Burns Oates amp Washbourne Ltd The Church s Anti Death Penalty Position United States Council of Catholic Bishops Schneck Stephen 29 April 2021 What does the church teach about the death penalty U S Cathoic Dulles Avery Catholicism and Capital Punishment EWTN Baha i Reference Library The Kitab i Aqdas Pages 203 204 reference bahai org Greenberg David F West Valerie 2 May 2008 Siting the Death Penalty Internationally Law amp Social Inquiry 33 2 295 343 doi 10 1111 j 1747 4469 2008 00105 x S2CID 142990687 Bibliography Jean Marie Carbasse 2002 La peine de mort Que sais je in French Paris Presses universitaires de France ISBN 2 13 051660 2 Kronenwetter Michael 2001 Capital Punishment A Reference Handbook 2 ed ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 432 9 Marian J Borg and Michael L Radelet 2004 On botched executions In Peter Hodgkinson and William A Schabas eds Capital Punishment pp 143 68 Online Cambridge Cambridge University Press Available from Cambridge Books Online doi 10 1017 CBO9780511489273 006 Gail A Van Norman 2010 Physician participation in executions In Gail A Van Norman et al eds Clinical Ethics in Anesthesiology pp 285 91 Online Cambridge Cambridge University Press Available from Cambridge Books Online doi 10 1017 CBO9780511841361 051 Wikinews has news related to Death penalty Wikimedia Commons has media related to Death penalty Wikiquote has quotations related to Capital punishment Further readingBellarmine Robert 1902 Seventh Sunday Capital Punishment Sermons from the Latins Benziger Brothers Bohm Robert M 2016 DeathQuest doi 10 4324 9781315673998 ISBN 9781315673998 Curry Tim Cutting the Hangman s Noose African Initiatives to Abolish the Death Penalty Archived 20 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine American University Washington College of Law Davis David Brion The movement to abolish capital punishment in America 1787 1861 American Historical Review 63 1 1957 23 46 online Gaie Joseph B R 2004 The ethics of medical involvement in capital punishment a philosophical discussion Kluwer Academic ISBN 978 1 4020 1764 3 Hammel A Ending the Death Penalty The European Experience in Global Perspective 2014 Hood Roger 2001 Capital Punishment Punishment amp Society 3 3 331 354 doi 10 1177 1462474501003003001 S2CID 143875533 Johnson David T Zimring Franklin E 2009 The Next Frontier National Development Political Change and the Death Penalty in Asia Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 533740 2 McCafferty James A 2010 Capital Punishment AldineTransaction ISBN 978 0 202 36328 8 Mandery Evan J 2005 Capital punishment a balanced examination Jones and Bartlett Publishers ISBN 978 0 7637 3308 7 Marzilli Alan 2008 Capital Punishment Point counterpoint 2nd ed Chelsea House ISBN 978 0 7910 9796 0 O Brien Doireann Investigating the Origin of Europe and America s Diverging Positions on the Issue of Capital Punishment Social and Political Review 2018 98 online Archived 21 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine Rakoff Jed S The Last of His Kind review of John Paul Stevens The Making of a Justice Reflections on My First 94 Years Little Brown 549 pp The New York Review of Books vol LXVI no 14 26 September 2019 pp 20 22 24 John Paul Stevens a throwback to the postwar liberal Republican U S Supreme Court appointees questioned the validity of the doctrine of sovereign immunity which holds that you cannot sue any state or federal government agency or any of its officers or employees for any wrong they may have committed against you unless the state or federal government consents to being sued p 20 the propriety of the increasing resistance of the U S Supreme Court to most meaningful forms of gun control p 22 and the constitutionality of the death penalty because of incontrovertible evidence that innocent people have been sentenced to death pp 22 24 Sarat Austin and Juergen Martschukat eds Is the Death Penalty Dying European and American Perspectives 2011 Woolf Alex 2004 World issues Capital Punishment Chrysalis Education ISBN 978 1 59389 155 8 for middle school students Simon Rita 2007 A comparative analysis of capital punishment statutes policies frequencies and public attitudes the world over Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 2091 0 Slater S J Thomas 1925 Book 6 On Capital Punishment A manual of moral theology for English speaking countries Burns Oates amp Washbourne Ltd Steiker Carol S Capital punishment and American exceptionalism Oregon Law Review 81 2002 97 online Willis John Willey 1911 Capital Punishment In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 12 New York Robert Appleton Company External linksThis section s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message About com s Pros amp Cons of the Death Penalty and Capital Punishment Archived 18 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine Capital Punishment article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1000 Death Penalty links all in one place Updates on the death penalty generally and capital punishment law specifically Texas Department of Criminal Justice list of executed offenders and their last statements Death Penalty Worldwide Archived 13 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Academic research database on the laws practice and statistics of capital punishment for every death penalty country in the world Answers com entry on capital punishment How to Kill a Human Being BBC Horizon TV programme documentary 2008 U S and 50 State death penalty capital punishment law and other relevant links Megalaw Two audio documentaries covering execution in the United States Witness to an Execution The Execution Tapes Wrongfully Convicted Citizens capital punishment of wrongfully convicted citizens in the US 2017 In favour External video Singapore s Mandatory Death Penalty on Drug Trafficking Government of SingaporeStudies showing the death penalty saves lives Criminal Justice Legal Foundation Keep life without parole and death penalty intact Why the death penalty is needed Pro Death Penalty com Pro Death Penalty Resource Page 119 Pro DP Links The Death Penalty is Constitutional The Paradoxes of a Death Penalty Stance by Charles Lane in The Washington Post Clark County Indiana Prosecutor s Page on capital punishment In Favor of Capital Punishment Famous Quotes supporting Capital Punishment Studies spur new death penalty debate Opposing World Coalition Against the Death Penalty Death Watch International International anti death penalty campaign group Campaign to End the Death Penalty Anti Death Penalty Information includes a monthly watchlist of upcoming executions and death penalty statistics for the United States The Death Penalty Information Center Statistical information and studies Amnesty International Abolish the death penalty Campaign Human Rights organisation European Union Information on anti death penalty policies IPS Inter Press Service International news on capital punishment Death Penalty Focus American group dedicated to abolishing the death penalty Reprieve org United States based volunteer program for foreign lawyers students and others to work at death penalty defense offices American Civil Liberties Union Demanding a Moratorium on the Death Penalty National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty NSW Council for Civil Liberties Archived 15 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine an Australian organisation opposed to the Death Penalty in the Asian region Winning a war on terror eliminating the death penalty Electric Chair at Sing Sing a 1900 photograph by William M Vander Weyde accompanied by a poem by Jared Carter Lead prosecutor apologizes for role in sending man to death row Shreveport Times 2015 James Haughton 1850 On death punishments a paper read before the Dublin Statistical Society Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland Dublin Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland hdl 2262 7759 ISSN 0081 4776 Wikidata Q28925851 Religious views Message supporting the moratorium on the death penalty The Dalai Lama Buddhism amp Capital Punishment from The Engaged Zen Society Orthodox Union website Rabbi Yosef Edelstein Parshat Beha alotcha A Few Reflections on Capital Punishment Lists several Catholic links Priests for Life The Death Penalty Why the Church Speaks a Countercultural Message by Kenneth R Overberg S J from AmericanCatholic org Wrestling with the Death Penalty by Andy Prince from Youth Update on AmericanCatholic org Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Capital Punishment Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Catholics Against Capital Punishment offers a Catholic perspective and provides resources and links Kashif Shahzada 2010 Why The Death Penalty Is un Islamic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capital punishment amp oldid 1133222462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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