HANDS OFF CAIN PRESENTS 2008 ANNUAL REPORT

Hands Off Cain Report's cover

24 July 2008 :

during the ceremony for the “Abolitionist of the Year 2008” Award, Hands Off Cain presented its 2008 Report on the Death Penalty Worldwide. The report covers the most important facts of 2007 and the first six months of 2008, and was edited by Elisabetta Zamparutti and published by Reality Book. The data confirms the worldwide trend towards abolition that has been underway for more than a decade.
The main point that emerges from the report is the declining number of countries that apply the death penalty, down from 51 in 2006,s already mentioned, in the u palation of executions in ining number of countries that apply the death penalty to 49. Executions, however, increased from at least 5,635 in 2006, to at least 5,851 in 2007. This increase, Elisabetta Zamparutti explained, is mainly due to the escalation of executions in Iran, with an increase of 30% to 355 in 2007, and in Saudi Arabia, where the number quadrupled from 39 in 2006 to 166 in 2007.
 Once again, Asia is the region where the vast majority of executions are carried out. China had at least 5,000 executions, which is approximately 85.4% of the total worldwide executions (despite reports of reductions since the preceding year). China is followed by Iran, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Iraq, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Yemen, North Korea, Syria, Bangladesh, Singapore, Kuwait and Malaysia.
The Americas are practically death-penalty free, the United States was the only country to execute anyone in 2007.
In Africa, the death penalty was carried out in 7 countries in 2007: Botswana, Egypt, Ethiopia, Equatorial Guinea, Libya, Somalia and Sudan. It should be noted that Ethiopia had not carried out an execution since June 1998, while Uganda, which executed two people in 2006, carried out no executions in 2007 and 2008.
In Europe, Belarus continues to be the only exception in an otherwise completely death penalty-free zone. 
Many of these countries do not issue official statistics on the death penalty, Sergio D’Elia emphasised. The death penalty is sometimes considered a state secret; therefore the number of executions may in fact be much higher.
This points to the fact that the fight against the death penalty entails, beyond the stopping of executions, a battle for democracy, for the respect of the rule of law and for political rights and civil liberties.
The worldwide trend towards the abolition of the death penalty by law and de facto of the last ten years was reaffirmed in 2007 and in the first six months of 2008.
Rwanda went from retentionist to abolitionist in July 2007. Kyrgyzstan abolished the death penalty in January 2007, after years of moratorium. Uzbekistan went from retentionist to abolitionist on January 1, 2008. Comoros, South Korea, Guyana and Zambia have gone more than ten years without an execution, establishing themselves as de facto abolitionist countries.
 

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