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Abolish the Death Penalty
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16549 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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11 / 1989 |
2,505 Words |
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John G. Healey John G. Healey is executive director of Amnesty International,
USA |
Ten thousand people gather at a rally for the public sentencing of 11 men convicted of theft, rape, and murder, after which the 11 are taken away for immediate execution.
Poison is injected into the arm of a woman convicted of murder.
A drug dealer is machine-gunned on national television.
An 18-year-old is hanged six days after his crime.
Crowds stone an adulterer to death.
Two thousand volts of electricity surge through the body of a man convicted of murder, only it doesn't kill him the first time; another surge, stronger and longer lasting, is administered.
These events happened recently in China, Iran, Iraq, Liberia, Nigeria, Thailand, and the United States, among others. In each case the government executed people according to the law, but no matter how it is carried out or what the legal process, the death penalty is always cruel, inhuman, and degrading punishment. The death penalty is an assault on human dignity and a violation of human rights. The United Nations states in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that every individual has a right to life and under no circumstances shall anyone be subject to torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading punishment. Human rights, by definition, apply to all people, even those whose acts are condemned by
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