March 27, 2014 -- Updated 1908 GMT (0308 HKT)
Virtual "killing sprees" in Iran and Iraq led to a spike in the number
of executions globally last year, according to Amnesty International,
although China executed more people than any other country. FULL STORY
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ON DEATH ROW FOR ALMOST 50 YEARS
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COUNTRIES ON WRONG SIDE OF HISTORY: OPINION
Report: Executions rise in 2013, China tops the list
March 27, 2014 -- Updated 0816 GMT (1616 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Amnesty study says executions jumped by 15 percent in 2013
- China executed more people than rest of world combined
- A dramatic rise in executions was reported in Iran and Iraq
- There's no evidence capital punishment deters crime, report says
Executions by beheading,
electrocution, firing squad, hanging and lethal injection rose by almost
15 percent in 2013 on the previous year, the organization said in its
latest report on the death penalty released Thursday.
China executed more
people than any other country last year. Although Chinese authorities
treat official execution statistics as a state secret, Amnesty
International estimates thousands are killed under the death penalty
every year, more than the rest of the world combined.
Excluding China, executions rose to at least 778 last year, up from 682 in 2012.
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Iran came in second, with
at least 369 put to death by the state, followed by Iraq (169), Saudi
Arabia (79), and the United States (39).
The United States was the
only country in the Americas that performed executions, although use of
the death penalty declined last year, to 39 executions from 43 in 2012.
Texas accounted for more than 40 percent of all American executions.
In total, 22 countries
practiced capital punishment last year, one more than in 2012. Four of
those countries -- Indonesia, Kuwait, Nigeria and Vietnam -- resumed
executions after a hiatus.
Amnesty International
could not confirm if executions took place in countries in conflict, but
said it "cannot be excluded" that executions took place in Syria and
Egypt.
At the end of 2013, more than 23,000 people were on death row around the world.
"The virtual killing
sprees we saw in countries like Iran and Iraq were shameful," Amnesty
International's Secretary General Salil Shetty said in a statement.
He added, "those states
who cling to the death penalty are on the wrong side of history and are,
in fact, growing more and more isolated."
Steady decline
Despite "alarming levels
of executions in an isolated group of countries," Amnesty noted that
the majority of the world is abolitionist in law or practice.
The use of the death
penalty has declined in the last 20 years, and the number of countries
enforcing the death penalty has fallen from 37 in 1993 to 22 last year
-- evidence that executions are becoming "a thing of the past," the
report said.
Some countries that
performed executions in 2012, including Gambia, the United Arab Emirates
and Pakistan, suspended use of the death penalty last year.
No executions were carried out in Europe and Central Asia -- marking
the first time since 2009. Belarus -- the only country in the region
that still has the death penalty -- did not execute anyone in 2013.
In the Middle East and North Africa, many of those executed were convicted under "vague anti-terrorism laws," the report said.
In Iran, where official
figures indicate a rise in executions of 18% on 2012, Amnesty
International said it had recorded "numerous cases" in which it appeared
the death penalty had been used to oppress activities of Iran's ethnic
minorities.
Iraq saw an increase in
executions of more than 30% compared to the previous year, the highest
figure since 2003. Most executions in recent years are thought to have
resulted from convictions under an anti-terror bill that covers acts
such as "provoking, planning, financing, committing or supporting others
to commit terrorism."
The report said new
counter-terrorism laws proposed by authorities in Egypt would expand the
scope of the death penalty, and could pose a particular concern for the
Muslim Brotherhood movement, which authorities classified as a
terrorist organization in December, 2013. On Monday, a court sentenced more than 500 supporters of ousted president Mohammed Morsy to death for killing a police officer.
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Despite the high number
of executions in China, there were "limited signs of progress,"
according to the report. China's Supreme Court announced an end to the
practice of harvesting organs from executed prisoners, and issued legal
guidelines to ensure greater procedural protections in death penalty
cases.
In Africa, some
countries including Benin, Ghana and Sierra Leone moved closer to ending
the death penalty through constitutional and legal review processes
that "created real opportunities for the abolition of capital
punishment." In Somalia, however, executions rose dramatically in
Somalia from six in 2012 to 34 last year.
Death for theft, drugs, blasphemy
Crimes that attracted
the death penalty ranged from murder, robbery, drug trafficking, and
corruption, to acts which Amnesty said should not be considered crimes
at all, including "adultery," "blasphemy," and "sodomy."
The report noted that
many countries use "vaguely-worded political 'crimes' to put real or
perceived dissidents to death." In North Korea, where the organization
said at least 70 executions took place according to reliable reports,
people were apparently executed for cannibalism, pornography, escaping
to China and watching banned videos from South Korea.
Public executions were
carried out in Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia and Somalia, but in many
instances executions took place in secret. Iranian authorities
acknowledged executing at least 369 people in 2013, but credible sources
reported "many hundreds" more" undocumented cases, the report said.
In some countries,
including Afghanistan, China, Iran, Iraq and North Korea, confessions
were extracted through torture or other ill-treatment, according to
Amnesty, and proceedings in most countries that still execute prisoners
did not meet international fair trial standards.
A deterrent?
In five countries,
India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia and South Sudan, prisoners sentenced
to death were not informed of their execution beforehand -- neither were
their family members or lawyers.
Almost all countries
justified the use of the death penalty as an alleged deterrent against
crime, a position which Amnesty said was becoming increasingly
"untenable and discredited."
The organization, which
opposes the death penalty in all cases, called on governments who "still
kill in the name of justice" to suspend the use of the death penalty
immediately, with a view to abolishing it.
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