executions in the world:

In 2024

0

2000 to present

0

legend:

  • Abolitionist
  • retentionist
  • De facto abolitionist
  • Moratorium on executions
  • Abolitionist for ordinary crimes
  • Committed to abolishing the death penalty

VATICAN CITY STATE

 
government: ecclesiastical
state of civil and political rights:
constitution: new Fundamental Law promulgated by Pope JOHN PAUL II on 26 November 2000, effective 22 February 2001 (replaces the first Fundamental Law of 1929)
legal system: based on Code of Canon Law and revisions to it
legislative system: unicameral Pontifical Commission for the State of Vatican City
judicial system: there are three tribunals responsible for civil and criminal matters within Vatican City; three other tribunals rule on issues pertaining to the Holy See
religion: Roman Catholic
death row:
year of last executions: 0-0-0
death sentences: 0
executions: 0
international treaties on human rights and the death penalty:

Convention on the Rights of the Child

Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment


situation:
Vatican use of the death penalty persisted into the 19th century, under Pope Pius IX; although on the books, neither the death penalty nor life imprisonment had been imposed after Vatican City became an internationally recognised sovereign state in 1929.
Pope Paul VI formally banned the use of the death penalty in Vatican City State in 1969.
Pope John Paul II declared the Church’s near total opposition to the death penalty. In his encyclical “Evangelium Vitae” (The Gospel of Life) issued in March 1995, he wrote that execution is only appropriate “in cases of absolute necessity: in other words, when it would not be possible otherwise to defend society. Today however, as a result of steady improvements in the organization of the penal system, such cases are very rare, if not practically non-existent.”
The revised Vatican constitution that took effect on 22 February 2001 removed the death penalty from the text of the Fundamental Law, equivalent to a constitution, which dates back to the 1929 creation of the modern Vatican City State.
On 11 July 2013, Pope Francis approved a major updating of the criminal laws of Vatican City State. The changes include the abolition of life imprisonment. The maximum penalty under the new Vatican code is 35 years. In October 2014, Pope Francis called life sentences “a death penalty in disguise” that should be abolished along with capital punishment. In the wide-ranging address to delegates from the International Association of Penal Law, Francis added that keeping inmates isolated in maximum security prisons is “a form of torture.”

 

news


 

NEWS

 
 
 

 

Europe