Showing posts with label abolishing death penalty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abolishing death penalty. Show all posts

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Supreme Court India issues notice to Centre on death penalty in SC/ST cases

10 MAY 2019 Last Updated at 4:18 PM | SOURCE: IANS

The Supreme Court on Friday issued a notice to the Centre on a plea challenging the validity of a section which prescribes for mandatory death sentence in a case where an innocent member of a Scheduled Caste (SC) or a Scheduled Tribe (ST) is convicted and is executed as a consequence of false and fabricated evidence given by the accused. The action of a bench headed by Justice S.A. Bobde came on a public interest litigation (PIL) challenging the mandatory death penalty under section 3(2)(i) of the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. The plea was filed by advocate Rishi Malhotra. The advocate told the court that the provision is "manifestly arbitrary, disproportionate, excessive, unreasonable, unjust, unfair, harsh, unusual and cruel".

Under Section 3(2)(i) of the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, whoever, not being a member of SC/ST, gives or fabricates false evidence intending thereby to cause any member of SC/ST to be convicted of an offence which is capital by the law for the time being in force shall be punished with imprisonment for life, and with fine, and if an innocent member of SC/ST is convicted and executed in consequence of such false or fabricated evidence, the person who gives or fabricates such false evidence, shall be punished with death.

Rishi Malhotra
The petitioner requested the court to strike down the provision with regard to mandatory death penalty as prescribed under Section 3(2)(i) of The Scheduled Castes & The Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act 1989. The petitioner said the said law is ultra vires of the Constitution and against the fundamental tenets of Constitutional laws. Citing various other sections which were quashed or amended by the court earlier, the advocate said: "As and when an occasion had arisen where the mandatory imposition of death penalty is called in question in different statutes, either this court by exercising its Constitutional powers of judicial review has struck down those provisions by holding it to be unconstitutional and void or the legislature itself has amended those provisions by removing the mandatory imposition of death penalty."

He mentioned Section 27(3) of the Arms Act which was declared void. He also told the court that the second part of Section 194 IPC is almost akin to Section 3(2)(i) of the Act but with a major difference in sentencing in as much as Section 194 IPC provides for an option of awarding death sentence or sentence of imprisonment for life. Similarly, Section 31A (1)(b) of the NDPS Act which initially provided for mandatory death sentence was rightly amended in 2014 by the legislature itself and further provided for an option of awarding death sentence or any other imprisonment as specified in Section 31 of the Act. Furthermore, if the mandatory death sentences are allowed to continue in the statute books, it would defeat the existence of very important provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure namely 235(2) Cr.P.C. as well as Section 354 (3) Cr.P.C. both of which provide for hearing of an accused on the quantum of sentence, the advocate added.


Koli gets 11th death sentence in Nithari murder case (Uttar Pradesh)

06 APRIL 2019 Last Updated at 7:36 PM | SOURCE: IANS

Ghaziabad, April 6 A CBI court awarded death sentence -- 11th -- to Surender Koli in the Nithari serial killing case, here on Saturday.

CBI Prosecutor J.P. Sharma said it was the 11th case in which Koli has been ordered to be hanged till death. But the court acquitted the co-accused Maninder Singh Pandher, due to lack of evidence. According to Sharma, a 10-year-old girl went missing after she had gone to deliver 'ironed' cloths at D-5, residence Pandher, where his domestic help Koli was living, on June 21, 2005. When the girl did not return home for two days, her parents lodged a complaint at Sector 20 police station on June 23, 2005.

Surender Koli (L); Maninder Singh Pandher (R)
The case was handed over to the CBI on June 11, 2007 and the agency submitted chargesheet on April 9, 2008. The court of special judge Amit Vir Singh held Koli guilty on Friday. On Saturday, the court awarded a death sentence to Koli and imposed a penalty of Rs 1.10 lakh on him. The court, however, acquitted Pandher for lack of credible evidence. On December 26, 2006 the Noida Police had recovered scull from the back of the house. In a DNA test, it was established that the scull was of the missing girl. The DNA report became most crucial evidence against Koli.

Thirty-eight witnesses testified in the case.



Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Death penalty exception, life term is rule, says SC

Published : Mar 21, 2019, 1:52 am IST

The death sentence must be imposed only when life imprisonment appears to be an altogether inappropriate punishment.

Supreme Court
New Delhi: The Supreme Court has held that life imprisonment is the rule, to which the death penalty is the exception. The death sentence must be imposed only when life imprisonment appears to be an altogether inappropriate punishment, having regard to the relevant facts and circumstances of the crime.

The apex court in a recent judgment said sentencing is a difficult task and often vexes the mind of the court, but where the option is between life imprisonment and a death sentence, if the court itself feels some difficulty in awarding one or the other, it is only appropriate that the lesser punishment be awarded.

A bench of Justices N.V. Ramana, M. Shantanagouder and Indira Banerjee said the courts are not obliged to make efforts either to give latitude to the prosecution or loosely construe the law in favour of the accused. The traditional dogmatic hyper technical approach has to be replaced by a rational, realistic and genuine approach for administering justice in a criminal trial. If a court finds it difficult to make a choice between death penalty and life imprisonment, it should opt for the lesser punishment.

In this case the appellant Sachin Kumar Singhraha was sentenced to death for the rape and murder of a five-year-old girl in Madhya Pradesh. He took the child to the school where his own daughter was studying, but the victim did not return home that day. He raped and killed her and dumped the body in a well. Both the trial and high courts slapped death sentence on him and he preferred the present appeal.

Disposing of the appeal, the Bench in its verdict said “he has committed a heinous offence in a premeditated manner. He not only abused the faith reposed in him by the parents but also exploited the innocence and helplessness of a child as young as five years of age. At the same time, we are not convinced that the probability of reform of the accused/appellant is low, in the absence of prior offending history and keeping in mind his overall conduct.”

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

No Prisoners Convicted For Rape, Murder, Corruption to be Released Under Govt Amnesty Scheme (All India)

Published: August 13, 2018 6:22 PM IST

New Delhi, Aug 13: Prisoners, including politicians, who have been convicted in cases of murder, rape or corruption, will not be released as part of an amnesty scheme announced by the government for the year-long celebrations to mark the 150th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi beginning October 2.

Women convicts aged 55 years and above and male convicts of 60 years or more, who have completed half of their sentence, and a few other categories of prisoners in jails across the country will be released under the amnesty scheme on October 2, 2018, April 6, 2019 and October 2, 2019, Home Ministry officials said. The central government has already conveyed to all states the guidelines on who all eligible for amnesty and asked them to prepare a list by August 15 so that the first batch could be released on October 2, the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi.

The following categories of prisoners, who have consistently maintained overall good conduct, will be eligible for special remission: 
  • Women convicts of 55 years of age and above, who have completed half of their actual sentence period, without counting the period of general remission earned by them;
  • Transgender convicts of 55 years of age and above, who have completed half of their actual sentence period, without counting the period of general remission earned by them;
  • Male convicts of 60 years of age and above, who have completed 50 per cent of their actual sentence period, without counting the period of general remission earned by them;
  • Physically challenged/disabled convicts with 70 per cent disability and more, duly certified by a medical board, who have completed half of their actual sentence period;
  • Terminally ill convicts, duly certified by a medical board;
  • Convicted prisoners who have completed two-third (66 per cent) of their actual sentence period;

However, the special remission is not to be granted to persons convicted for an offence for which the sentence is death penalty or where death sentence has been commuted to life imprisonment.

The other categories of prisoners who will not be considered for amnesty are:

Persons convicted for an offence for which punishment of death has been specified as one of the punishments;
  • Persons convicted for an offence for which punishment of life imprisonment has been specified as one of the punishments.
  • Cases of convicts involved in terrorist activities or persons convicted under Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1985 (TADA), The Prevention of Terrorism Act, 2002 (POTA), Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (UAPA), The Explosive Substances Act, 1908, The National Security Act, 1982 (NSA), Official Secrets Act, 1923, Anti-Hijacking Act, 2016;
  • Prisoners convicted for dowry death;
  • Those convicted for counterfeiting currency notes (FICN) – cases under section 489 (A to E) of Indian Penal Code;
  • Prisoners convicted for the offence of Rape, human trafficking and the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012 (POCSO), Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956;
  • Cases of prisoners convicted under Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002, Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA), Black Money (Undisclosed Foreign Income and Assets) and Imposition of Tax Act, 2015;
  • Cases of prisoners convicted under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 (NDPS);
  • Prisoners convicted under the Weapons of Mass Destruction and their Delivery Systems (Prohibition of Unlawful Activities), Act, 2005;
  • Those convicted under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988;
  • Prisoners convicted for offences against the State (Chapter-VI of IPC); and prisoners convicted under any other law which the state government and union territory administrations consider appropriate to exclude.
Since prisons and persons detained therein are ‘State’ subjects, the state governments have been advised to constitute a state level committee to examine cases of eligible prisoners satisfying and fulfilling the conditions, an official said. The state governments will place the recommendation of the committee before the Governor for consideration and approval in exercise of his power under Article 161 of the Constitution of India and in case of Jammu and Kashmir under Section 34 of its Constitution. Cases where approval of the central government is required as per law may be sent to the Ministry of Home Affairs. The foreign nationals, who have been convicted, shall be released with the concurrence of the Ministry of External Affairs, another official said. The official made it clear that prisoners, including politicians, who are serving sentence for rape, murder or corruption, will not be released under the scheme.

Source: https://www.india.com/news/india/no-prisoners-convicted-for-rape-murder-corruption-to-be-released-under-govt-amnesty-scheme-3221216/ (Accessed 25 December 2018)

Tharoor moves private bill to abolish death penalty (All India)

Shemin Joy, New Delhi, AUG 11 2018, 10:55AM IST 

Calling it an "aberration in a healthy democracy" and a "dated form of retributive justice" untenable with India's non-violent traditions, Congress MP Shashi Tharoor has moved a private members' bill seeking abolishment of death penalty. 

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor
The Death Penalty (Abolition) Bill was introduced in Lok Sabha recently by the Congress MP from Kerala and it joins a series such private members' bills and resolutions moved in Parliament by MPs like CPI's D Raja and DMK's Kanimozhi. None of the earlier attempts was fructified as the government stood adamantly against removing the death penalty from the statutes as most parties, except the Le, support execution as a form of punishment. In his Bill, Tharoor wants to amend the Indian Penal Code to ensure that "no person convicted of any oence shall be punishable with the sentence of death" and wherever it is applicable, it should be replaced with life imprisonment. 

Tharoor argues that the death penalty is "untenable with our historic traditions of non-violence and has no place" in 21st century India. The death penalty is a "distraction" from the needed strengthening of preventive and reformative models of our judicial systems, he says. The Statement of Objects and Reasons of the Bill says, "death penalty remains an aberration in a healthy democracy and has in eect failed to fulfil the purpose it was designed to. Instead, it has reduced the State, the moral safeguard and gatekeeper of justice for the common citizen to a make the world blind." Tharoor is of the view that the death penalty is "untenable" to the concept of a "just and reasonable legal procedure, as the ends of justice in deterring criminal activity, is not served by the death penalty, more than the punishment of life imprisonment". 

The penological justifications for the death penalty are "no longer valid", in light of the evolving jurisprudence and criminology, "in favour of restorative justice, rather than justice motivated by retribution", the Bill says. Though the sentencing of death is measured through the doctrine of 'the rarest of rare', the Bill says the very nature of this doctrine lends itself to "human bias". It stands in "stark contradiction" with the previous tenet of a judgment beyond the scope of reasonable doubt. The Supreme Court and the Law Commission, which studied the death penalty acknowledged this. The Law Commission, in its report on the death penalty that recommended its abolition except in terrorism cases, had concluded that the exercise of mercy powers under articles 72 and 161 of the Constitution, have failed to act as a "bulwark against the miscarriage of justice in the imposition of the death penalty". "The fact that lower courts award a significant number of death sentences, of which, only a fraction of these is confirmed by the Supreme Court, lends credence to the belief that the 'rarest of rare' doctrine has not been applied in spirit by lower courts," the Bill says. 

It also highlighted that the "significant percentage" of individuals who have been given this sentence hail from socio-economically vulnerable groups and emphasised that it illustrated the "larger implications of such bias". "Further, the utility of capital punishment as a 'deterrent' to crime and terror stands effectively diminished given that comprehensive studies have statistically denied any correlation between the rate of crime and death penalty. The existence of such a punishment also renders implausible any scope for reformation of a convict," the Bill says, an argument which has been highlighted in the Law Commission report too. 

Source: https://www.deccanherald.com/national/death-penalty-abberation-686913.html (Accessed 25 December 2018)

Monday, December 24, 2018

HC seeks Centre’s response on plea for abolishing death penalty (New Delhi)

New Delhi, June 1 (IANS) The Delhi High Court on Friday issued notice to the Centre and others on a plea that sought abolition of the death penalty to those accused of minors’ gang rape.

A bench of Acting Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice C. Hari Shankar listed the matter for July 31. Social Action Forum for Manav Adhikar (SAFMA) had moved the court through advocate Charu Walikhanna, seeking declaration of Sections 5 and 6 of the Criminal Law (Amendment) Ordinance, 2018, (prescribing death sentence for gang rape of children under the age of 12) as void, being in derogation of Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution.

In the wake of widespread outrage over the gang rape and murder of an 8-year-old girl in Jammu and Kashmir and succumbing to political expediency, the impugned ordinance had been introduced, the plea said. The petitioner claimed that the ordinance was brought without conducting proper research, adding that no prior consultations were held with the Law Commission, National Human Rights Commission and the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights.

The plea said that capital punishment is neither a solution nor deterrence against heinous crime. The petitioner also sought the setting up of a committee headed by a NHRC member to come out with steps to tackle rapes, especially of minor girls, by adopting scientific principles and data.

Source: http://www.canindia.com/hc-seeks-centres-response-on-plea-for-abolishing-death-penalty/ (Accessed 24 December 2018)

Sunday, December 23, 2018

The road from Tiruppur (Tamil Nadu)

Written by P.S. KRISHNAN |Updated: January 19, 2018 12:04:13 am
The author is former Secretary to government of India and works in the field of social justice for SCs, STs, BCs for the last more than six-and-half decades.

P.S. Krishnan
The speedy trial and conviction in a Tamil Nadu ‘honour killing’ case indicates that amended SC/ ST Prevention of Atrocities act is yielding results. 

The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Amendment Act 2015 (POA Amend. Act) has begun to yield results. The Act was enacted to comprehensively amend and strengthen the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act 1989 (POA Act 1989). Tamil Nadu’s Tiruppur Principal District and Sessions Court has on December 12, 2017 convicted eight of the accused for the murder of V. Shankar, a B.Tech-educated Dalit youth, son of a labourer, as a punishment for the marriage between him and Kausalya, a non-Dalit, educated girl from a middle-class family. The court awarded death sentences to six of the accused, including Kausalya’s father. The trial was completed one year and nine months after the crime. 

V. Shankar, a B.Tech-educated Dalit youth and Kausalya, a non-Dalit, educated girl from a middle-class family 
This is fast by Indian standards and was facilitated by the appointment of an exclusive Special Public Prosecutor by the state government, in accordance with the POA Amend. Act. The trial could have been completed even faster — the Act lays down a time limit of two months — if the state government had, as required by the amended Act and Rules, also taken the following steps: One, establish an exclusive special court. Two, set up a high-powered “vigilance and monitoring committee”, with the chief minister as chairman and ministers of home, finance, and SC and ST departments, SC and ST MPs, MLAs and MLCs, senior bureaucrats, and local representatives of national commissions for SCs and STs as members. This committee is required to meet every January and July and discharge functions listed in Rule 16.

The Act requires these two steps to be taken by every state government. The successful prosecution of this case and the appropriate punishment awarded should be utilised to prevent further cases of atrocities including “dishonorable” killings, unfortunately referred to as “honour killings”. In addition to the two measures mentioned above, certain other steps must be taken in Tamil Nadu and all other states. There is clear perception of threat to the life and security of Kausalya and Shankar’s family. Effective police protection, withdrawn a year after the murder, should be restored and maintained till the threat clearly disappears. The death sentence will have to go to the high court for confirmation. There may also be appeals. These have to be diligently attended to by the state government.

Appropriate schemes should be prepared for the rights and entitlements of victims and witnesses in accessing justice as required. This case shows that the life of a young man with a promising career was snuffed out, the life of a young woman also with a promising career, blighted. A family has been drowned in sorrow, and six of the convicted are facing premature death by law. This is an example of wholesale destruction caused by the caste system. This case should be widely publicised and people exhorted to come out of the death-trap of the caste system and mentality. There have been a number of cases of the past where persons have been killed for Dalit and non-Dalit marriages and surviving wives and families are languishing, like those of Abhirami and Divya, whose husbands lost their life in 2012 and 2013, respectively. Abhirami’s elder brother and father were convicted in 2015. The state government has to take stock of such cases and ensure the confirmation of death sentences by the high court.

I am averse to all violence, including the death penalty. But unfortunately, in India’s deeply caste-ridden society in which normal human beings are criminalised in the caste context, death sentences become inevitable, like surgical amputations to save the body. All survivors should be fully and permanently rehabilitated and honoured in public functions. The state government should take charge of the entire education of the children of Abirami and other such survivors. The role of the local police in a number of cases has been adversely commented upon — like that of the Deputy Superintendent of Police of Usilampatti with respect to Dilip Kumar and Vimala Devi in 2014. Police officers and personnel who have been in dereliction of their duty should be prosecuted under Section 4 of the Act. The IPS officers of the state must rectify caste biases on the part of lower officers and personnel. The government should take stock of inter-caste marriages between Dalits and non-Dalits and give them full protection. 

Killings and other atrocities occur to the greatest extent in marriages between Dalits and non-Dalits. This is a recent phenomenon, in addition to the atrocities on traditional grounds related to land, resistance to “untouchability”, etc. But there are also instances where such crimes take place where partners belong to a non-Dalit “lower” caste and an “upper” caste. To cover such cases, it will be necessary to have a separate legislation with provisions for the effective protection, a deterrent death sentence, and total rehabilitation. This is particularly important because inter-caste marriages are bound to take place and should become more frequent. Political parties should take a clear stand against such violence and in favour of inter-caste marriages.

The perils of the caste system, including its adverse consequences on the growth of employment opportunities for the youth of all communities, should be effectively impressed on the younger generation through the education system. The POA Amendment Act should be studied by every chief minister, home minister, SC and ST department minister, chief secretary, home secretary and DGP. They should take full charge of its implementation. Training courses should be held at different levels for police officers and other officers of the district administration. 

Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/the-road-from-tiruppur-dalit-murder-tamil-nadu-honour-killing-5030604/ (Accessed 24 December 2018)

Gopalkrishna Gandhi’s New Book Assails President Mukherjee’s `Robotic’ Use Of His Powers To Reject Mercy Petitions

BY: LIVE LAW RESEARCH TEAM 
DECEMBER 26, 2016 
10:43 AM

The President, Pranab Mukherjee, has so far, under Article 72 of the Constitution, rejected mercy petitions from 36 death row convicts, commuted the death sentences of three of the 36 convicts whose mercy petitions were rejected by him, three have been hanged, 17 have been successful in getting the Supreme Court or the high court commute their death sentences by setting aside the rejection of the mercy petitions, while the remaining 16 are oscillating between life and death, as they have not exhausted the legal remedies available to them. As he completes his term as the President in July next year, he may like to reflect on the legacy which he leaves for his successors. There is no doubt that the President, under the Constitution, is bound by the ministerial advice tendered to him, on whether to accept or reject a mercy petition from a death row convict. Does this make the president a mere rubber stamp?, asks Gopalkrishna Gandhi, author of the recent book, Abolishing the Death Penalty: Why India Should Say No To Capital Punishment (Aleph, 2016), and answers thus: “Rubber stamps do not necessarily come with rubber handholds. They can be made of firm wood and, sometimes, even steel. And they can choose to use their own, not the ‘state issued’, inking pad of unvarying magenta.” 

Book: Abolishing the Death Penalty by Gopalkrishna Gandhi
The author adds that a president can accept without demur the government’s advice on whether a mercy petition of a death row convict should be rejected. Or, the president can if he so wishes to, ask questions, make comments, and seek clarifications before he confirms advice, it is perfectly possible that he can occasion some rethinking in the government and actually change the course of the case.” Some presidents, Gopalkrishna Gandhi says, have not troubled the government with second thoughts, others have; To give evaluations and revaluations a chance to excavate the ingredients of a death penalty case is not an act of procrastination but of responsibility. It is both wise and humble. To not do so is unwise and arrogant. It is also callous, he suggests. Gopalkrishna Gandhi considers Mukherjee as a retentionist, while categorising former presidents, K.R.Narayanan, A.P.J.Abdul Kalam and Pratibha Patil, as abolitionists. He observes, “Presidential inclinations cannot form the final gradient to the gallows. A mercy petition cannot be at the mercy of one man’s temperament, albeit filtered by governmental advice. That is valuationally abhorrent in a democratic republic governed by the rule of law.” 

In the provisions of Article 72, the author says, lie a philosophy inadequately explained, that requires the executive study of a mercy petition to be trans-judicial but not un-judicious, to be a large canvas but not a tabula rasa for presidential expressionism. No man’s life can be left to the mercy of another man’s discretion, he is categorical. “Raisina Hill is not the Purana Qila, nor Rashtrapati Bhavan the Red Fort”, he says succinctly. The book is a lucid analysis of the arguments for and against death penalty, and is likely to convert a retentionist into an abolitionist. Is the abolition of death penalty possible in India? More often, leaders and institutions move along the grain of prevailing public opinion. Those in India are no different from this global phenomenon. But is it a sign of being democratic? To Gopalkrishna Gandhi, it is a sign of moral unventuresomeness and intellectual feebleness. Francois Mitterrand of France and Nelson Mandela of South Africa, greatly assisted by two non-political judicial intellects, Robert Badinter and Justice Arthur Badinter was a French criminal lawyer, university professor, politician and activist against death penalty, whose abolition he successfully sponsored in Parliament in 1981. Mitterrand chose him as his Minister of Justice, after coming to power. Arthur Chaskalson was President of the Constitutional Court of South Africa from 1994 to 2001, and Chief Justice of South Africa from 2001 to 2005. The court’s first major decision under his leadership, was the abolition of the death penalty on June 6, 1995. 

To abolish death penalty, India has to wait for its Badinter and Chaskalson moments. Those advocating abolition of death penalty are invariably asked the question about the victims, and their families, and their cry for justice, which is answered in the form of death sentence for the killers. The book’s response to this is that death penalty deprives the convict, the experience of the consequences of his crime, which is the objective of any punishment. By snatching the life of the convict at one go, the state may achieve closure to the case, but the objectives of the punishment are not fulfilled, and justice remains incomplete. The author also seeks answers to the difficult question of whether life sentence without remission can be a substitute to death sentence, as the Supreme Court has held in several recent cases. He merely observes that the right to life is about more than freedom from the noose. It is, he says, about the right conditions for prisoners’ officially incapacitated livingconditions that are compatible with human dignity. Left to himself, would a prisoner prefer death sentence, or life imprisonment without remission? Poor and inhuman conditions prevailing in India’s prisons would suggest that a prisoner may prefer death to life imprisonment without remission. But the answer is not as simple as that. open, rather than pre-determined by the Court, which has no idea of the prisoner’s capacity for reform, at the time of sentencing. Therefore, the current phase of life imprisonment without remission cannot be considered a victory for the abolition movement. A murder, committed on impulse, without premeditation, as we all know, does not merit a death sentence. 

Death penalty, insofar as it is imposed after premeditation by the State on a convict, therefore, is nothing but a State-sponsored murder, which ought not to remain in the statute books. The author, a well-known diplomat and author, is currently a Distinguished Professor at Ashoka University. According to Roger Hood, Professor Emeritus of Criminology, University of Oxford, co-author of The Death Penalty: A Worldwide Perspective, the book makes a convincing case for complete abolition of the death penalty in India. Fali S. Nariman, senior advocate, observes that punishment with death is not at all necessary to convince people that killing people is a crime! This is the message eloquently conveyed in this unputdownable book, he adds. The book’s cover has a persuasive question posed at the centre of the noose: Is taking another life a just punishment or an act as inhuman as the crime that triggered it? Any reader who reads this book is likely to say no to the first question, and yes to the second. 

This article has been made possible because of financial support from Independent and Public-Spirited Media Foundation.

Source: https://www.livelaw.in/gopalkrishna-gandhis-new-book-assails-president-mukherjees-robotic-use-powers-reject-mercy-petitions/ (Accessed 23 December 2018)

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Tripura assembly passes resolution to abolish death penalty

Aug 07, 2015 17:43:57 IST
IANS

The ruling Left Front members and opposition Congress legislators unanimously passed a resolution in the Tripura assembly on Friday, urging the Centre to abolish the death penalty. The resolution, moved by Congress MLA Jitendra Sarkar, suggested rigorous life imprisonment until the death of the guilty instead of capital punishment. 

Tripura Chief Minister Manik Sarkar. Image courtesy PIB
Supporting the Congress lawmaker's resolution, Chief Minister Manik Sarkar told the house that the death penalty does not give the convicted person scope for repentance. Supporting the Congress lawmaker's resolution, Chief Minister Manik Sarkar told the house that the death penalty does not give the convicted person scope for repentance.

Former opposition leader and Congress legislator Ratan Lal Nath, however, opposed his party MLA's motion. "If anyone takes away the life of an innocent person, he/she (the murderer) has no right to live," Nath said.

Source: https://www.firstpost.com/india/tripura-assembly-passes-resolution-to-abolish-death-penalty-2383436.html (Accessed on 18 December 2018)

How the President decides matters of life and death

Written by Maneesh Chhibber |Updated: July 29, 2015 6:14:13 pm
maneesh.chhibber@expressindia.com

If Yakub Memon is hanged on July 30, he will be the third death row convict to be executed following the rejection of their clemency pleas by President Pranab Mukherjee. Since he became President in 2012, Mukherjee has turned down mercy pleas in at least 24 cases. Under Article 72 of the Constitution, the President can grant pardon, and suspend, remit or commute a sentence of death. However, the President does not exercise this power on this own — he has to act on the advice of the Council of Ministers. This too has been made clear by the Constitution.

In October last year, Yakub applied for presidential pardon after which a report from the state government was sought by the MHA. (PTI)


Under the existing rules of procedure governing mercy petitions, the view of the Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), conveyed to the President in writing, is taken as the view of the Cabinet, and the President decides a mercy petition accordingly. Once a convict has been finally awarded the death sentence by the Supreme Court, anybody, including a foreign national, can send a mercy petition with regard to that person to the President’s Office or the MHA. A mercy plea can also be sent to the Governor of the state concerned, who then forwards it to the MHA for further action.

The convict can file a mercy plea from prison through officials, his lawyer or family. These days, mercy petitions can also be emailed to the MHA or President’s Secretariat. A few years ago, the Union Ministry of Law told the MHA that the President’s power to grant pardons, reprieves, respites or remissions of punishment under Article 72 was “absolute and cannot be fettered by any statutory provisions” under the Code of Criminal Procedure or prison rules. The then Law Secretary, T K Vishwanathan, also said that while commuting the death sentence, the President could direct that the convict would remain in prison for the whole of his natural life, and not be released after remission of the term. Vishwanathan clarified that life imprisonment meant “imprisonment for the whole of the remaining period of the convicted person’s natural life, and not 14 years in prison”.

Different Presidents have dealt with mercy petitions differently. Since there is no fixed timeframe for disposing of a mercy petition, both the MHA and President have sometimes sat on cases for years. Thus, at the end of his five-year term, APJ Abdul Kalam left behind over two dozen mercy pleas, having decided only two — rejecting the plea of rape-cum-murder convict Dhananjoy Chatterjee (2004), and commuting the death sentence of Kheraj Ram into life imprisonment (2006). Kalam’s predecessor, K R Narayanan, was tardier, and failed to decide a single mercy petition during his 1997-2002 term.

MHA data show that Presidents, with the exceptions of Narayanan and Pratibha Patil, have dealt with mercy petitions largely without mercy. According to information released by the government under the RTI Act, of the 77 mercy pleas decided by Presidents between 1991 and 2010, 69 were rejected. Only 8 — about 10% — of those who sought mercy were spared the gallows. R Venkataraman (1987-1992) rejected 44 mercy pleas, the most by any President. During her 2007-2012 term, Patil, the country’s first woman President, accepted the mercy pleas of 30 death row convicts — pardoning, among others, Piara Singh, Sarabjit Singh, Gurdev Singh and Satnam Singh, who killed 17 members of a family at a wedding; Govindasamy, who murdered five relatives in their sleep; and Dharmender Singh and Narendra Yadav, who killed an entire family of five, including a 15-year-old girl, whom Yadav had tried to rape, and her 10-year-old brother, whom they burnt alive.

Several Presidents have allowed their personal convictions — views against the death penalty or religious beliefs — to come in the way of their taking swift action on pending mercy petitions. Central governments have been accused of being guided by political considerations in making recommendations on mercy pleas to the President. The MHA has sometimes jumped the queue in sending mercy petitions to the President — the most recent case being that of 26/11 terrorist Ajmal Kasab, who was hanged in November 2012. The Ministry has on occasion also changed its recommendation — from rejecting a mercy petition to favouring its acceptance. On the issue of delay in deciding mercy pleas, the Supreme Court in a landmark judgment last year held that the death sentence of a condemned prisoner can be commuted to life imprisonment on the ground of delay on the part of the government in deciding the mercy plea.

Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/how-the-president-decides-matters-of-life-and-death/ (Accessed on 18 December 2018)


Friday, February 6, 2015

98 countries have abolished death penalty

TNN | Sep 15, 2014, 05.24AM IST

Written history has several mentions of capital punishment. The legal principle lextalionis — an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a life for a life — was mentioned in the 18th century BCE code of Babylonian king Hammurabi. Many ancient societies had similar codes to justify judicial executions. The 7th century BCE's Draconian Code of Athens, the 5th century BCE Roman Law and Kautilya's Arthasastra, all had provisions of death sentence. These executions were done by several methods like crucifixion, drowning, beating to death, stoning, burning alive, impalement, hanging and so on. How many countries carry out judicial executions? According to Amnesty International's 2014 report on death penalties, in 2013, at least 778 executions were reported in 22 countries, 96 more than in 2012.

With at least 369 executions in the year, Iran leads the list. It is followed by Iraq (169+), Saudi Arabia (79+), USA (39) and Somalia, where at least 34 judicial executions took place. Other countries that reported more than 10 executions were Sudan and Yemen. The global executions figure does not include China which is believed to have been executed thousands of convicts. China classifies death penalty as a state secret. The report also shows that at least 1,925 people were sentenced to death in 57 countries in 2013. As of 2013, there are 23,392 death row inmates globally. The methods of execution range from beheading, hanging, lethal injection to shooting. How many countries have abolished the death sentence? Amnesty International reports that as of the end of 2013, more than two-thirds of all countries have abolished death penalty in law or in practice. There are 98 countries which have abolished it for all crimes.

Most of these are in Western Europe and the Americas. Seven countries, including Brazil, Chile and Kazakhstan have abolished it for ordinary crimes. In these countries, death penalty can only be given for exceptional crimes such as crime committed under military law or under exceptional circumstances. Another 35 countries are categorized as abolitionist in practice. These retain the death penalty for ordinary crimes, but there have been no executions in the past 10 years. The death sentence is retained by the legal system of 58 countries. More than half of the world's population lives in these countries. What do opponents of capital punishment say?

They say that it is possible for innocent people to get executed because of unfair and discriminatory application of the death penalty. Studies across the world have shown that in most cases the person sentenced to death is from an economically and socially backward section of society, indicating the inability to hire good lawyers to contest their cases. Many studies have suggested that there is no evidence to show that capital punishment has any effect on murder rates. It is also argued that the sentence is a denial of human rights and sends a wrong message — that killing is acceptable under certain circumstances.


Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/98-countries-have-abolished-death-penalty/articleshow/42493356.cms [last accessed 06.02.2015]

Death penalty no deterrent despite two being awarded daily, says NGO


New Delhi, Sept 1, 2014, DHNS: Two people are sentenced to death every day in India, but it has not proved to be a deterrent to crime, says the latest report by NGO Asian Centre for Human Rights. Analysing government data for 12 years from 2000, the report, “India: Death Penalty Has No Deterrence”, said the key grounds for retention of death penalty is the perception that it acts as a deterrent against gruesome and diabolical crimes. “From 2001 to 2012, the death sentences of 1,552 convicts were confirmed while the death sentences for 4,382 convicts were commuted to life imprisonment. This implies that a total of 5,934 convicts were given death sentence in the last 12 years in India, ie, about two convicts being given death sentence every working day of the judiciary,” said the report. The report also noted that President Pranab Mukherjee has rejected 97 per cent of the mercy petitions he received since assuming office on July 25, 2012. Mukherjee has considered 23 mercy pleas involving 31 death-row convicts, out of which only one convict, Atbir, was granted mercy. The report said despite executions of an average of 128 death-row convicts per year from 1953 to 1963 as per the 35th Report of the Law Commission, the decade-wise increase in murder cases during the same period was about 17 per cent, as per the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB). “Obviously, executions did not act as a deterrent,” said the NGO's report. Rather, it noted, drastic reduction in award of death penalty and executions post the Supreme Court verdict on rarest-of-rare cases drastically brought down murder cases. As per the NCRB, the decade-wise decrease of murder cases between 1992 and 2002 was 12.43 per cent in actual terms, despite India's population growing by 21.34 per cent in the same period. Quoting Home Ministry data, the report said though no convict under anti-terror laws from Jammu and Kashmir was executed since 1990 until the execution of Afzal Guru in 2013, the state recorded a “significant decline” in terror incidents, with 5,247 such reports in 1993 to 220 in 2012. Source: http://www.deccanherald.com/content/428732/death-penalty-no-deterrent-despite.html [last accessed 06.02.2015]

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Pune Bakery blast main accused Himayat Baig is innocent, says Bhatkal

Krishna Kumar  New Delhi, September 5, 2013 | UPDATED 22:03 IST

Mohammed Ahmed Sidibappa, alias Yasin Bhatkal has reportedly told interrogators that Himayat Baig the man who is been accussed of being involved in Pune's German Bakery blast and who has been recently sentenced to death was innocent and that he was not involved in the conspiracy. Bhatkal has claimed that it he was him and Qateel Siddiqui who engineered the blasts and not Baig, Bhatkal's claim has not surprised those who know the reality of how the Maharashtra ATS has been conducting its investigations in sensational cases.

Since the time it was formed the Maharashtra ATS has been known for only one thing botching up its investigations and ending up with egg on its face. Take for instance the July 11, 2006 serial blasts in Mumbai's local trains. The ATS arrested a number of accussed in the case, one of them was Shabbir Ahmed Masiullah alias Batterywala. How the Anti Terrorist Squad conducts its investigations can be gauged from the fact that one month later when a series of bomb explosions rocked Malegaon on September 8, the ATS showed Batterywala to be involved in the Malegaon blast. So according to the ATS Batterywala was involved in the Mumbai serial blasts in trains for which he was arrested and then some how he was involved in executing the Malegaon 2006 blasts.

Incidentally the nine accussed alleged to be involved in the 2006 Malegaon blasts who were arrested by the ATS have been found by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) to have no links with the blasts case and the agency has hence not opposed their discharge applications.

This has not been the only blooper, there are much doubts as to whether the ATS has caught the right suspects in the Mumbai serial train blasts too. The ATS arrested 11 accussed in the July 11, train blasts however in 2008 the case took a new turn after the Mumbai Crime Branch busted a module of the Indian Mujahideen. The Crime Branch arrested one Sadiq Shaikh along with his accomplices who told the police that it was the IM that was involved in the 2006 train blasts and not those arrested. The disclosure caused much embarrassment because it was not the defence lawyer but the investigation of another law enforcement agency that expressed doubts about who actually created the 2006 blasts.

While Yasin Bhatkal has absolved Baig now after he has been sentenced, there were doubts as to his role in the blasts even prior to his trial. None other than the DIG of Police Ravindra Kadam (ATS) who was investigating the case publicly said that Baig was not in Pune on the day of the blasts. This when the ATS was all along claiming that he along with Bhatkal had planted the bomb in the German Bakery. A day later however Kadam claimed that he was not aware of Baig's exact role. Interestingly the cell phone records show that Baig was in Aurangabad when the Pune bomb went off. When Baig was sentenced to hang by the trial court, he pleaded before the judge that he was not guilty, " In the German Bakery blast 17 innocent people were killed. Now one more innocent person is being victimised. I am the 18th victim of the blast. To render justice to the victims of the blast it would be inappropriate to punish another innocent person.

Friday, December 2, 2011

Petition in high court against death penalty

TNN Nov 30, 2011, 11.06PM IST
KOCHI: A lawyer based at Kochi approached the Kerala high court on Wednesday with a petition challenging death penalty.

The petition, filed by advocate Manju Antoney, seeks amendment of section 53 of the Indian Penal Code, which deals with punishment for offenders, including death penalty. Death penalty is against the noble principles laid out in the Constitution and most of the countries have abolished this law, the petitioner says.

As of February 2011, 95 countries have abolished death penalty, while eight countries are allowing death sentence in special circumstances. However, death penalty has not been implemented in the last 10 years in 49 countries, the petition says.

The petitioner also highlighted a non-binding resolution by the United Nations in 2007 that called for a moratorium on execution with a view to abolishing death penalty. Many courts in India are awarding death sentences despite these circumstances, and therefore, an amendment is needed, he says.

A division bench of acting Chief Justice Manjula Chellur and Justice P R Ramamchandra Menon heard the petitioner but said the petition was incomplete to be accepted as a public interest litigation in the present form.

Observing that the amendment should be made at higher platforms, the court asked the petitioner to monitor the proceedings in Parliament related to death penalty as well as study other public interest litigations on the same matter and file an amended petition after four weeks.

source: http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-11-30/kochi/30459237_1_death-penalty-petition-division-bench

accessed on 2nd December 2011

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Capital punishment is primitive: Zacharia

The Hindu:
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, November 29, 2011
Special correspondent:

Writer Paul Zacharia has said that it is high time India abolished capital punishment as it is founded on the primitive and fallacious belief that a crime can be undone by killing a person.

Inaugurating a convention seeking a moratorium on capital punishment, organised by the Committee Against Capital Punishment, here on Monday, Mr. Zacharia said the media's celebration of the capital punishment awarded to Govindachamy in the Soumya murder case was born out of the innate human craving for war and gore and the social consensus of the current times on the need to meet crime with crime. The recent murder of a youth by a moral vigilante group was the result of this mindset. Television channels were particularly adept at feeding this war hysteria. This was in evidence immediately after the 26/11 Mumbai terrorist attacks when some media organisations even called for an immediate war with Pakistan.

What actually played out in Govindachamy's case was hatred for a foreigner, the craving for bloodshed and upper caste sense of honour. The reaction would not have been so celebratory had the accused belonged to any of the major communities in Kerala, he said. The writer pointed out that in India capital punishment was also a political weapon and said that no judge would have been able to award anything less than capital punishment in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case. The clamour for hanging the accused in the Parliament attack case was another case in point, he added.

Chairing the convention, journalist B.R.P. Bhaskar said that Kerala had changed so much over the last 25 years that a person suspected of pick-pocketing could be beaten to death and nobody found anything wrong in capital punishment which was nothing but judicial murder. The people of Kerala must ask themselves how things came to such a pass. Equally important was to raise the question what role the media played in preparing the Malayali mind to accept murders in society and those ordered by the judiciary without any sense of guilt. The media should introspect on this and society at last should start worrying about this if the State were to become a better place to live, Mr. Bhaskar said.

On the occasion, academic N.A. Kareem said capital punishment derived its legitimacy from the legal guarantees to protect life and also to take life. As important as capital punishment was extra judicial killings as was evident in the killing of Maoist leaders Azad and Kishenji, both of whom were enticed into the police dragnet under the guise of negotiations. Such killings showed that the State could not be trusted with the power to take a person in the name of the law. The quality of the judiciary also raised serious questions about the wisdom of persisting with capital punishment, Dr. Kareem said.

Source: http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/article2670071.ece
accessed on 1st December 2011