The intention of Vietnam to carry our executions was blocked by the refusal of foreign countries to provide the poisons required. Similar refusal to supply the US has led to the use of one or two poisons rather than the three considered to cause a painless death. US States have also used chemicals intended to kill animals.
Meanwhile Vietnam has developed its own poisons with the result that death is "too slow".
The Vietnamese news item was translated by Google. This website has not cared to improve the translation
Politics - News Social news.Updated at 14:06 , 10/28/2013Have 3 cases of death by lethal injection(
News news ) - Morning 28/10 , Justice Minister Ha Hung Cuong said three
cases were death by lethal injection while the remaining 684 death
sentences .
Psychological processes of the first prisoners by lethal injection
The first prisoners by lethal injection is?
More than 170 prisoners from lethal injection on 27/6
Proposal backed by lethal injection for death row inmateReport
to Congress morning 28/10 , the Minister of Justice Ha Hung Cuong said
the country is still waiting for 684 prisoners sentenced to death . In
the 682 it is the responsibility of the enforcement agency of the of Public Security , and 2 cases of agencies responsible for
enforcement of the Army .Justice Minister Ha Hung Cuong report to CongressJustice Minister Ha Hung Cuong report to CongressThe
first case of death by lethal injection took place on 6/8 in Hanoi with
Nguyen Anh Tuan prisoners ( 27 years old , born in Me Linh District,
Hanoi - The number of detained : 2757A1 ) . This prisoner guilty of murder and robbery .After the executions are done , the Ministry of Public Security held a meeting to draw lessons for implementation. According
to Minister Ha Hung Cuong , in the month 10/2013 , judgment enforcement
agencies have conducted two case anymore death by lethal injection in
the form of Son La and Hai Phong .In the report , the Minister Ha Hung Cuong stressed that death by lethal injection is still slow . Currently
the number is rapidly increasing prison created enormous pressure for
the detention , detention facilities are lacking . Currently reviewing proposals focus detained persons sentenced to death camps in southern and northern camp .
Earlier,
on 1/7/2011 enforcement of criminal law has been in effect , Vietnam is
no longer applicable to death by firing squad instead is lethal
injection . To
prepare for the implementation of this project , the Ministry of Public
Security in collaboration with a number of agencies 5 base construction
execution in these areas , including Hanoi .However,
due to difficulties in the preparation of poisons, enforcement forces
and facilities to the implementation of the death penalty by lethal
injection was delayed .
After that , the Government issued Decree amending the implementation of the death penalty . Accordingly,
the use of prescribed drugs for executions of 3 types : sensory loss
drugs , drugs and drugs listed musculoskeletal system of the heart to
stop functioning .
Each prisoner will be given a dose of the three drugs mentioned above . Injections
will be transmitted directly into the veins of death and follow 3 -step
process : Injection sensory loss , in the case of prisoners of
consciousness is not lost until given further visual loss .Next, prisoners will be given medication lists musculoskeletal system and finally injections to stop the heart's activity .Thuy Van ( General Employees , DT )
เรากำลังรณรงค์การยุติโทษประหารในประเทศไทย ซึ่งเป็นหนึ่งในเพียงไม่กี่ประเทศในโลกที่ยังคงใช้วิธีการลงโทษที่ป่าเถื่อนเช่นนี้อยู่
Monday, October 28, 2013
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Declaration of Sharia in Brunei
Brunei
is considered an abolitionist country. No known executions have occurred in Brunei since
1957. All that ends today with the declaration of implementation of Sharia law.
Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah said in a speech that a new Sharia Penal Code had been gazetted Tuesday and would "come into force six months hereafter and in phases".
Based on the details of particular cases, punishments can include stoning to death for adulterers, severing of limbs for theft and flogging for violations ranging from abortion to consumption of alcohol, according to a copy of the code.
"By the grace of Allah, with the coming into effect of this legislation, our duty to Allah is therefore being fulfilled," said the sultan, now 67 years old.
Where is AICHR, the supposed organ of human rights in ASEAN?
Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah said in a speech that a new Sharia Penal Code had been gazetted Tuesday and would "come into force six months hereafter and in phases".
Based on the details of particular cases, punishments can include stoning to death for adulterers, severing of limbs for theft and flogging for violations ranging from abortion to consumption of alcohol, according to a copy of the code.
"By the grace of Allah, with the coming into effect of this legislation, our duty to Allah is therefore being fulfilled," said the sultan, now 67 years old.
Where is AICHR, the supposed organ of human rights in ASEAN?
Saturday, October 19, 2013
บทนำ abolitionthai
วันต่อต้านโทษประหารชีวิตสากลในปี 2556
นี้ (World Day for Abolition of the Death Penalty)
สมาคมสิทธิและเสรีภาพของประชาชน – สสส.(Union for Civil Liberty – UCL)
ได้มีการจัดทำเว็บไซต์ภาษาไทยขึ้นเพื่อจุดประสงค์ในการเผยแพร่ความรู้เกี่ยว
กับการยกเลิกโทษประหารชีวิตเพื่อการก้าวไปสู่การยกเลิกโทษดังกล่าวในประเทศ
ไทย
ซึ่งจะมีการเสนอเรื่องดังกล่าวต่อรัฐสภาในอนาคตอันใกล้รวมถึงให้ประเทศไทย
สิทธิในการมีชีวิต (Right to Life) เป็นสิทธิมนุษยชนขั้นพื้นฐานและเป็นต้นกำเนิดของสิทธิมนุษยชนด้านอื่นๆ สิทธิในการมีชีวิตนี้มักจะถูกกล่าวหาเป็นสิทธิที่ขัดขวางการลงโทษประหาร ชีวิตต่อผู้ซึ่งละเมิดสิทธิในการมีชีวิตของผู้อื่น ซึ่งถ้อยคำเหล่านี้อาจะเป็นสิ่งที่ถูกต้องในอดีตซึ่งเป็นช่วงเวลาที่สังคม ยังไม่ได้มีการพัฒนาระบบกระบวนการยุติธรรมเพื่อรับมือกับอาชญากรรมและปกป้อง ประชาชนในสังคม อย่างไรก็ตาม ในประเทศประชาธิปไตยที่พัฒนาแล้ว ซึ่งกระบวนการยุติธรรมมีประสิทธิภาพในการรับมือกับอาชญากรรมและเป็นเครื่อง มือในการปกป้องประชาชนในสังคม โทษประหารชีวิตกลายเป็นสิ่งที่รุนแรงและโหดร้ายซึ่งไม่ได้ช่วยป้องกันการ เกิดอาชญากรรมร้ายแรงแต่อย่างใด และยังจะเป็นการลดคุณค่าของชีวิตของมนุษย์คนหนึ่งลงด้วย
สิทธิในการมีชีวิต (Right to Life) เป็นสิทธิมนุษยชนขั้นพื้นฐานและเป็นต้นกำเนิดของสิทธิมนุษยชนด้านอื่นๆ สิทธิในการมีชีวิตนี้มักจะถูกกล่าวหาเป็นสิทธิที่ขัดขวางการลงโทษประหาร ชีวิตต่อผู้ซึ่งละเมิดสิทธิในการมีชีวิตของผู้อื่น ซึ่งถ้อยคำเหล่านี้อาจะเป็นสิ่งที่ถูกต้องในอดีตซึ่งเป็นช่วงเวลาที่สังคม ยังไม่ได้มีการพัฒนาระบบกระบวนการยุติธรรมเพื่อรับมือกับอาชญากรรมและปกป้อง ประชาชนในสังคม อย่างไรก็ตาม ในประเทศประชาธิปไตยที่พัฒนาแล้ว ซึ่งกระบวนการยุติธรรมมีประสิทธิภาพในการรับมือกับอาชญากรรมและเป็นเครื่อง มือในการปกป้องประชาชนในสังคม โทษประหารชีวิตกลายเป็นสิ่งที่รุนแรงและโหดร้ายซึ่งไม่ได้ช่วยป้องกันการ เกิดอาชญากรรมร้ายแรงแต่อย่างใด และยังจะเป็นการลดคุณค่าของชีวิตของมนุษย์คนหนึ่งลงด้วย
เรื่องการยกเลิกโทษประหารชีวิตนี้เป็น
เรื่องที่ต้องใช้เวลาในการทำความเข้าใจ
และการสำรวจความคิดเห็นของประชาชนโดยที่ไม่ได้ให้ข้อมูลความรู้เกี่ยวกับผล
กระทบของโทษประหารชีวิตและเหตุผลว่าทำไมถึงควรยกเลิกโทษดังกล่าว
ไม่สามารถนำมาใช้เป็นแนวทางในการทำให้เกิดสิ่งที่ถูกต้องในสังคมได้
เว็บไซต์นี้จะนำเสนอเกี่ยวกับเหตุผลของการต้อง
ซึยกเลิกโทษประหารชีวิตในมุมมองของสิทธิมนุษยชนซึ่งได้รับการยอมรับใน
ประชาคมโลกส่วนใหญ่
เรายินดีที่จะรับฟังความคิดเห็นของท่านและตอบคำถามเกี่ยวกับประเด็นการยก เลิกโทษประหารชีวิต หวังว่าการแลกเผลี่ยนทัศนคติในครั้งนี้สามารถทำให้ความกลัวและความสงสัย เกี่ยวกับการยกเลิกโทษประหารชีวิตนั้นหมดไป และทำให้การใช้โทษประหารชีวิตกลายเป็นสิ่งที่คงอยู่แต่เพียงในประวัติศาสตร์ เท่านั้น
เรายินดีที่จะรับฟังความคิดเห็นของท่านและตอบคำถามเกี่ยวกับประเด็นการยก เลิกโทษประหารชีวิต หวังว่าการแลกเผลี่ยนทัศนคติในครั้งนี้สามารถทำให้ความกลัวและความสงสัย เกี่ยวกับการยกเลิกโทษประหารชีวิตนั้นหมดไป และทำให้การใช้โทษประหารชีวิตกลายเป็นสิ่งที่คงอยู่แต่เพียงในประวัติศาสตร์ เท่านั้น
Letter on Abolition to Miinister of Justice from World Coalition and FIDH
22nd Floor Software Park Building
Chaeng Wattana Road
Pakkred, Nonthaburi 11120, Thailand
Paris, 8
October 2013
Dear Minister of
Justice,
On the eve of the 11th World Day Against the Death Penalty, the World Coalition Against the Death Penalty (World Coalition) and the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) write to you to urge the Government of Thailand to take immediate steps to abolish the death penalty, an irrevocable, inhuman, cruel and degrading punishment that does not make society safer.
The World Coalition
and FIDH also welcome the organization of the expert seminar on moving away
from the death penalty in South East Asia by the Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights in cooperation with the Ministry of Justice of Thailand which will take place in Bangkok on 22-23 October
2013.
Thailand is one of the 58 retentionist countries which still carry out the death penalty. The last execution took place in August 2009 when two convicted drug traffickers were executed by lethal injection.
In August 2012, Thailand abolished
the death penalty for offenders under 18 years of age and reduced life
imprisonment for minors to 50 years. On 16 August 2012, a royal pardon was
announced whereby all prisoners who have been sentenced to death and whose
cases have reached a final verdict would have their death sentences commuted to
life imprisonment. In December 2010 and 2012, Thailand abstained during the UNGA
vote on a resolution for a moratorium on the use of the death penalty. It had
previously voted against it in 2007 and 2008.
The World Coalition
and FIDH hope that these positive steps indicate a growing political will on
the part of the Government of Thailand to move progressively and expeditiously
towards abolition.
We are concerned, however, that Thai courts continue to hand down new death sentences every year, including for drug-related offenses, in contravention to the recommendation of the UN Human Rights Committee in 2005. Thailand is a State party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which requires States that still retain the death penalty to restrict its use to only the “most serious crimes”, which drug-related offenses are not.
We are concerned, however, that Thai courts continue to hand down new death sentences every year, including for drug-related offenses, in contravention to the recommendation of the UN Human Rights Committee in 2005. Thailand is a State party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which requires States that still retain the death penalty to restrict its use to only the “most serious crimes”, which drug-related offenses are not.
We further regret that Thailand did not accept the ten recommendations on abolition or moratorium it received from UN Member States at the Universal Periodic Review in October 2011, and urge Thailand to reconsider its position on these important recommendations.
The global trend
towards abolition is strong and unmistakable. Two of Thailand’s
fellow ASEAN Member States, Cambodia and the Philippines,
have abolished the death penalty while no executions have been reported in Burma and Laos in the last decade. According
to the United Nations, approximately 150 countries have abolished the death
penalty or introduced a moratorium, either in law or in practice. Many
countries have abolished the death penalty when public opinion was still in
favour of it, and this demonstrates that political courage is needed to steer
societies towards a more compassionate and less violent future, and to ensure
the full respect for the right to life, as guaranteed by the ICCPR.
Thailand’s second National Human Rights Action Plan
(2009-2013) includes the review of laws which permit capital punishment and the
replacement of capital punishment with life imprisonment as indicators of
success. The Human
Rights Plan will be renewed this year and the World Coalition and FIDH encourage Thailand
to make abolition of the death penalty one of the key recommendations for the
third Human Rights Plan.
Thank you for your serious consideration of our recommendations and we look forward to hearing from you.
Sincerely yours,
Florence Bellivier
Karim Lahidji
FIDH President
Friday, October 18, 2013
Introducing a Sister Site
Dear followers of deathpenaltythailand,
The original concept of this site was that it would contain posts in both Thai and English. However, the news sources are mostly in English and a bottleneck in translation has resulted in a patent ascendency of the English language. Which ill serves Thai followers. Meanwhile, the cause of abolition in Thailand has been advancing. from a dream perspective to quasi real plans to attain abolition.
The nub of the problem is a lack of political will to achieve abolition as explained in a recent post. However, the word in the street is that the will of the Thai people must be consulted on any movement for abolition. Well and good, but we know already what the response of uninformed opinion will be.
There is no programme of providing the Thai people with information on the arguments for abolition and why the trend to abolition has become so strong a worldwide current.
UCL responds to this situation by dedicating a 100 per cent Thai language website to meet this need. Some of the material will be mined from deathpenaltythailand. Other parts will be inspired by the unique requirements of a Thai site.
We warmly invite Thai readers of deathpenaltythailand to patronise the new Thai site. Our English language followers may browse a little to see what the new site may offer.
While the English language site is enabled by a wish and a prayer, more material support is needed to launch a Thai site. We gratefully acknowledge modest support by the European Union to ensure the first six months of this site. There is no doubting the sincerity and dedication of our European partners to the cause of abolition of the death penalty. An appreciation of the inalienable value of human life is Europe at its best. It was born with the Greek miracle, birthstone of humanism and democracy, nurtured in the renaissance and the rediscovery that man is the measure of all things, brought to maturity in the age of enlightenment, tested in the fire of fascism and Nazism, and proclaimed in the glorious Universal Declaration of Human Rights, when European thinkers discovered that their ideals had common ground with the ideals of history and development in all cultures of the world, as exemplified in the first article that all men are brothers, "and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood". The site URL is abolitionthai.com
The original concept of this site was that it would contain posts in both Thai and English. However, the news sources are mostly in English and a bottleneck in translation has resulted in a patent ascendency of the English language. Which ill serves Thai followers. Meanwhile, the cause of abolition in Thailand has been advancing. from a dream perspective to quasi real plans to attain abolition.
The nub of the problem is a lack of political will to achieve abolition as explained in a recent post. However, the word in the street is that the will of the Thai people must be consulted on any movement for abolition. Well and good, but we know already what the response of uninformed opinion will be.
There is no programme of providing the Thai people with information on the arguments for abolition and why the trend to abolition has become so strong a worldwide current.
UCL responds to this situation by dedicating a 100 per cent Thai language website to meet this need. Some of the material will be mined from deathpenaltythailand. Other parts will be inspired by the unique requirements of a Thai site.
We warmly invite Thai readers of deathpenaltythailand to patronise the new Thai site. Our English language followers may browse a little to see what the new site may offer.
While the English language site is enabled by a wish and a prayer, more material support is needed to launch a Thai site. We gratefully acknowledge modest support by the European Union to ensure the first six months of this site. There is no doubting the sincerity and dedication of our European partners to the cause of abolition of the death penalty. An appreciation of the inalienable value of human life is Europe at its best. It was born with the Greek miracle, birthstone of humanism and democracy, nurtured in the renaissance and the rediscovery that man is the measure of all things, brought to maturity in the age of enlightenment, tested in the fire of fascism and Nazism, and proclaimed in the glorious Universal Declaration of Human Rights, when European thinkers discovered that their ideals had common ground with the ideals of history and development in all cultures of the world, as exemplified in the first article that all men are brothers, "and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood". The site URL is abolitionthai.com
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
World Day Against the Death Penalty
10th October marked the 11th World Day against the death penalty. We mark the day by reactions
World Day 1
"Justice that kills is not justice", 42
countries that have signed a joint call for the abolition of the death penalty
believe.
According to the signatories, death penalty meant
inherent inhumanity. "The death penalty is not only an intolerable
affront to human dignity, its use goes hand in hand with numerous violations of
the human rights of the condemned and their families. Moreover, capital
punishment has no positive impact on crime prevention or security and does not
in any way repair the harm done to the victims and their families."
"The aim of our appeal is not to deliver a lecture, but
to share our experience as well as our conviction. If the history of the
abolition of the death penalty in our various countries has taught us anything,
it is that the path is long and hard. Capital punishment was not repealed
overnight. Its abolition became a reality only as a result of increasing
awareness and constant collective effort. It was through perseverance and in
gradual stages that the number of executions fell, the list of crimes
punishable by death was narrowed, justice became more transparent, de facto
moratoriums on executions were established and that - finally - the death
penalty disappeared. It is this process that countries that still carry out
executions in the name of justice must go through."
This joint call to abolish the
death penalty is signed by the following ministers of foreign affairs: Ditmir Bushati (Albania), Gilbert Saboya Sunyé (Andorra), Michael Spindelegger (Austria), Didier Reynders (Belgium), Zlatko Lagumd?ija (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Kristian Wigenin (Bulgaria), Vesna Pusić (Croatia), Ioannis Kasoulides (Cyprus), Jan Kohout (Czech Republic), Villy Søvndal (Denmark), Urmas Paet (Estonia), Erkki Tuomioja (Finland), Laurent Fabius (France), Nikola Poposki (FYR Macedonia), Guido Westerwelle (Germany), Evangelos Venizelos (Greece), János Martonyi (Hungary), Gunnar Bragi Sveinsson (Iceland), Eamon Gilmore (Ireland), Emma Bonino (Italy), Edgars Rinkēvičs (Latvia), Aurelia Frick (Liechtenstein), Linas Antanas Linkevičius (Lithuania), Jean Asselborn (Luxembourg), George Vella (Malta), Natalia Gherman (Moldova), José Badia (Monaco), Igor Lukšić (Montenegro), Frans Timmermans (Netherlands), Espen Barth Eide (Norway), Rui Machete (Portugal), Titus Corlățean (Romania), Pasquale Valentini (San Marino), Ivan Mrkić (Serbia), Miroslav Lajčák (Slovakia), Karl Erjavec (Slovenia), José Manuel García-Margallo (Spain), Carl Bildt (Sweden), Didier Burkhalter (Switzerland), Ahmet Davutoğlu (Turkey), Leonid Koschara (Ukraine) and William Hague (United Kingdom).
From a meeting held in the Faculty of Law of the University of Kabul:
The questions and remarks raised by the audience (mainly
students from the faculty of law of Kabul
and NGO activists invited) showed a deep and sincere inclination in favor of
death penalty.
As Afghanistan is at war (and has been during the last 35 years), it is understandable ; Robert Badinter mentioned in his "famous" speech in 1981 : war time and abolition are not compatible.
The debate was calm and interesting but for the Afghan students, it's clear that the death penalty is needed
- to deter criminals
- to punish criminals
- in a country where the police is weak
- in a country where the justice system is weak
- in a country where terrorism is widespread
- in a country where sharia law is a source of law (and sharia law allows in some specific cases and under specific circumstances the death penalty)
- in a country that has no money to keep detainees in prison for their whole life
- in a country where the prisons are not well guarded and criminals can easily escape.
World Day 3
Statement by the African Commission on World Day against the Death Penalty
As Afghanistan is at war (and has been during the last 35 years), it is understandable ; Robert Badinter mentioned in his "famous" speech in 1981 : war time and abolition are not compatible.
The debate was calm and interesting but for the Afghan students, it's clear that the death penalty is needed
- to deter criminals
- to punish criminals
- in a country where the police is weak
- in a country where the justice system is weak
- in a country where terrorism is widespread
- in a country where sharia law is a source of law (and sharia law allows in some specific cases and under specific circumstances the death penalty)
- in a country that has no money to keep detainees in prison for their whole life
- in a country where the prisons are not well guarded and criminals can easily escape.
World Day 3
Statement by the African Commission on World Day against the Death Penalty
On 10 October 2013, the
African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Commission), joins
the rest of the world in celebrating the 11th World Day against the Death Penalty.
The theme for this year’s celebration is: ‘’Stop
Crime, Not Lives’’.
Scientific research on the impact of the death penalty has shown that its dissuasive aspects are not more effective than those of other forms of punishment, such as life in prison. By executing murderers, child rapists and other perpetrators of barbaric acts in order to calm the grief of families of victims, we are moving closer to the notion of vengeance which brings to mind the ancient era of private justice when victims and their families took the law into their own hands. The death penalty, by its absolute and irreparable nature, is incompatible with any policy to reform offenders, is against any system based on respect for human beings, impedes the unity and reconciliation of people emerging from conflict or serious crimes, and jeopardises criminal justice by making it absolute whereas it has to remain attentive to possible errors.
Scientific research on the impact of the death penalty has shown that its dissuasive aspects are not more effective than those of other forms of punishment, such as life in prison. By executing murderers, child rapists and other perpetrators of barbaric acts in order to calm the grief of families of victims, we are moving closer to the notion of vengeance which brings to mind the ancient era of private justice when victims and their families took the law into their own hands. The death penalty, by its absolute and irreparable nature, is incompatible with any policy to reform offenders, is against any system based on respect for human beings, impedes the unity and reconciliation of people emerging from conflict or serious crimes, and jeopardises criminal justice by making it absolute whereas it has to remain attentive to possible errors.
In Africa, 17
countries have abolished the death penalty in their laws and justice systems,
while 20 other States have observed a de facto moratorium for more than ten
years. African states that have legally abolished the death penalty are Angola, Benin, Burundi, Cape Verde, Cote d'Ivoire, Djibouti, Gabon, Guinea-Bissau, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, SaoTome and Principe, Senegal, Seychelles, South Africa, and Togo.
The African Commission is concerned by the wave
of executions that have recently been carried out in some African countries, in
particular in the Edo State of Nigeria,
Somalia, South Sudan, Botswana
and The Gambia where nine people who had spent years on death row were secretly
executed.
The African Commission is further concerned at
the increasing number of death sentences handed down by courts which increases
the number of people on death row.
Justice
Minister of Zimbabwe,
Emmerson Mnangagwa, has thrown his weight behind the anti-death penalty
campaign and pledged to push for the abolition of capital punishment.
Mnangagwa,
who is a death penalty survivor, was addressing activists after a march
organized by Amnesty International Zimbabwe to mark the World’s Death Penalty
Day in Harare.
Wednesday, October 09, 2013
Death Penalty in Thailand
Death Penalty Statistics - 30th September 2013
Condemned Prisoners
Legal Process Complete 112
Before Appeal Court 430
Before Supreme Court 152
Total 694
Legal Process Complete - Details
Crime Male Female Total
Drug Cases 41 8 49
Homicide Cases 62 1 63
Combined 103 9 112
Source: Department of Corrections
As provided to Union for Civil Liberty: 7th October 2013
Condemned Prisoners
Legal Process Complete 112
Before Appeal Court 430
Before Supreme Court 152
Total 694
Legal Process Complete - Details
Crime Male Female Total
Drug Cases 41 8 49
Homicide Cases 62 1 63
Combined 103 9 112
Source: Department of Corrections
As provided to Union for Civil Liberty: 7th October 2013
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