Death penalty 2014: Alarming rise in death sentences
Death penalty 2014: Alarming rise in death sentences as governments resorted to capital punishment to combat crime and terrorism
• States used the
death penalty in a flawed attempt to tackle crime, terrorism
and internal instability
• Sharp spike in death sentences largely due to mass sentences in Egypt and Nigeria - at least 2,466 imposed globally, up 28% on 2013
• 607 executions recorded, down almost 22% on 2013 (excluding those carried out in China, which executed more than the rest of the world put together)
• 22
countries known to have executed, the same number as 2013
An alarming number of countries used the death penalty to tackle real or perceived threats to state security linked to terrorism, crime or internal instability in 2014, Amnesty International found in its annual review of the death penalty worldwide.
The number of death
sentences recorded in 2014 jumped by almost 500 compared to
2013, mainly because of sharp spikes in Egypt and Nigeria,
including mass sentencing in both countries in the context
of internal conflict and political
instability.
“Governments using the death penalty to
tackle crime are deluding themselves. There is no evidence
that shows the threat of execution is more of a deterrent to
crime than any other punishment,” said Salil Shetty,
Amnesty International’s Secretary General.
“The
dark trend of governments using the death penalty in a
futile attempt to tackle real or imaginary threats to state
security and public safety was stark last year.
“It
is shameful that so many states around the world are
essentially playing with people’s lives – putting people
to death for ‘terrorism’ or to quell internal
instability on the ill-conceived premise of
deterrence.”
But there was also good news to be
found in 2014 - fewer executions were recorded compared to
the year before and several countries took positive steps
towards abolition of the death penalty.
Top executioners
China again carried out more executions than the rest of the world put together. Amnesty International believes thousands are executed and sentenced to death there every year, but with numbers kept a state secret the true figure is impossible to determine.
The
other countries making up the world’s top five
executioners in 2014 were Iran (289 officially announced and
at least 454 more that were not acknowledged by the
authorities), Saudi Arabia (at least 90), Iraq (at least 61)
and the USA (35).
Excluding China, at least 607
executions were known to have been carried out in 2014,
compared to 778 in 2013, a drop of more than 20 per cent.
Executions were recorded in 22 countries in 2014, the
same number as the year before.
This is a significant
decrease from 20 years ago in 1995, when Amnesty
International recorded executions in 42 countries,
highlighting the clear global trend of states moving away
from the death penalty.
“The numbers speak for
themselves – the death penalty is becoming a thing of the
past. The few countries that still execute need to take a
serious look in the mirror and ask themselves if they want
to continue to violate the right to life, or join the vast
majority of countries that have abandoned this ultimate
cruel and inhuman punishment,” said Salil
Shetty.
State security
The
disturbing trend of states using the death penalty to combat
threats against state security was visible around the world,
with China, Pakistan, Iran and Iraq all executing people
accused of “terrorism”.
Pakistan resumed
executions in the wake of the horrific Taliban attack on a
Peshawar school. Seven people were executed in December, and
the government has said it will put hundreds more convicted
on “terrorism”-related charges to death. Executions
continued at a high rate in 2015.
In China
authorities made use of the death penalty as a punitive tool
in the “Strike Hard” campaign against unrest in the
Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region.
Authorities
executed at least 21 people during the year related to
separate attacks, while three people were condemned to death
in a mass sentencing rally conducted in a stadium in front
of thousands of spectators.
“In a year when
abhorrent summary executions by armed groups were branded on
the global consciousness like never before, it is appalling
that governments are themselves resorting to more executions
in a knee-jerk reaction to combat terrorism and crime,”
said Salil Shetty.
In countries including North
Korea, Iran and Saudi Arabia, governments continued to use
the death penalty as a tool to suppress political dissent.
Other states made use of executions in similarly flawed
attempts to tackle crimes rates. Jordan ended an eight-year
moratorium in December, putting eleven murder convicts to
death, with the government saying it was a move to end a
surge in violent crime. In Indonesia, the government
announced plans to execute mainly drug traffickers to tackle
a public safety “national emergency” – promises it
made good on in 2015.
Spike in death sentences
There was a dramatic rise in the
number of death sentences recorded in 2014 compared to the
previous year– at least 2,466 compared to 1,925 - a jump
of more than a quarter. This was largely due to developments
in Nigeria and Egypt, where hundreds of people were
sentenced to death. In Nigeria, 659 death sentences were
recorded in 2014, a jump of more than 500 compared with the
2013 figure of 141.
Military courts handed down mass
death sentences against some 70 soldiers during the year in
separate trials. They were convicted of mutiny in the
context of the armed conflict with Boko Haram. In Egypt,
courts handed down at least 509 death sentences during 2014,
400 more than recorded during the previous year. This
included mass death sentences against 37 people in April and
183 people in June following unfair mass
trials.
Methods and crimes
Methods of executions in 2014 included
beheading, hanging, lethal injection and shooting. Public
executions were carried out in Iran and Saudi Arabia. People
faced the death penalty for a range of non-lethal crimes
including robbery, drug-related crimes and economic
offences.
People were even sentenced to death for
acts such as “adultery”, “blasphemy” or
“sorcery”, which should not be considered crimes at all.
Many countries used vaguely worded political “crimes” to
put real or perceived dissidents to
death.
Regional breakdown
THE AMERICAS
The USA continued to be the only
country to put people to death in the region, although
executions dropped from 39 in 2013 to 35 in 2014 –
reflecting a steady decline in the use of the death penalty
in the country over the past years. Only seven states
executed in 2014 (down from nine in 2013) with four - Texas,
Missouri, Florida and Oklahoma –responsible for 89 per
cent of all executions. The state of Washington imposed a
moratorium on executions in February. The overall number of
death sentences decreased from 95 in 2013 to 77 in
2014.
ASIA PACIFIC
The Asia
Pacific region saw a mixed bag of death penalty developments
in 2014. Executions were recorded in nine countries, one
fewer than the year before. Pakistan lifted a moratorium on
execution of civilians. Thirty-two executions were recorded
in the region, although these numbers do not include China
or North Korea,where it was impossible to confirm numbers.
Indonesia announced plans to resume executions mainly of
drug traffickers in 2015.
The Pacific continued to be
the world’s only virtually death penalty free zone,
although the governments of both Papua New Guinea and
Kiribati took steps to resume executions or introduce the
death penalty.
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Sub-Saharan Africa saw particular
progress in 2014. Fourty-six executions were recorded in
three countries compared to 64 executions in five countries
in 2013 – a drop of 28 per cent. Only three countries
-Equatorial Guinea, Somalia and Sudan – were known to have
carried out executions. Madagascar took a progressive step
towards abolition when the country’s National Assembly
adopted a bill abolishing the death penalty on 10 December,
although the bill has to be signed by the country’s
president before becoming law.
EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA
Belarus - the only country in
the region that executes - put at least three people to
death during the year,ending a 24-month hiatus on
executions. The executions were marked by secrecy, with
family members and lawyers only being informed after the
fact.
MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
The widespread use of the death
penalty in the Middle East and North Africa continued to be
extremely troubling. Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia accounted
for 90 per cent of all recorded executions in the region,
and 72 per cent of all recorded executions globally
(excluding China).
In 2014 executions were recorded
in eight countries, two more than in 2013. Sixteen countries
imposed death sentences – a large majority of countries in
the region.
The overall number of executions recorded
in the MENA region dropped from 638 in 2013 to 491 last
year. These figures do not include hundreds of executions
that are known to have occurred in Iran but which were not
officially announced. In 2014 the Iranian authorities
acknowledged 289 executions, however reliable sources
reported another 454 executions – bringing the total to
743.
ENDS