Document - PEINE DE MORT. Statistiques 2006


DEATH PENALTY STATISTICS 2006



April 2007SummaryAI Index: ACT 50/012/2007







This document is a compilation of the annual death penalty statistics for 2006. It includes information under the following headings:


Death Sentences and Executions in 2006(AI Index: ACT 50/004/2007),


Facts and Figures on the Death Penalty -1 January 2007 (AI Index: ACT 50/002/2007)


List of Abolitionist and Retentionist Countries -1 January 2007 (AI Index: ACT 50/001/2007).


Please refer also to a death penalty essay, released in April 2007, entitled Stop the State Killing - (AI Index: ACT 50/011/2007).





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Death sentences and executions in 2006



April 2007


AI Index: ACT 50/004/2007





During 2006, at least 1,591 people were executed in 25 countries.(1) At least 3,861 people were sentenced to death in 55 countries. These were only minimum figures; the true figures were certainly higher.


Executions are known to have been carried out in the following countries in 2006:



Country

BAHRAIN


BANGLADESH


BOTSWANA


CHINA


EGYPT


EQUATORIAL GUINEA


INDONESIA


IRAN


IRAQ


JAPAN


JORDAN


KOREA (North)


KUWAIT


MALAYSIA


MONGOLIA


PAKISTAN


SAUDI ARABIA


SINGAPORE


SOMALIA


SUDAN


SYRIA


UGANDA


USA


VIET NAM


YEMEN



Death sentences are known to have been imposed in the following countries in 2006:


Country


AFGHANISTAN


ALGERIA


BAHAMAS


BAHRAIN


BANGLADESH


BELARUS


BENIN


BOTSWANA


BRUNEI DARUSSALAM


BURKINA FASO


ap1 BURUNDI


CHINA


CONGO (Dem. Rep)


EGYPT


GUINEA


GUYANA


INDIA


INDONESIA


IRAN


IRAQ


JAPAN


JORDAN


KAZAKSTAN


KENYA


KOREA (North)


KOREA (South)


KUWAIT


KYRGYZSTAN


LAOS


LIBYA


MALAYSIA


MALI


MONGOLIA


MOROCCO


MYANMAR


NIGERIA


PAKISTAN


QATAR


SAUDI ARABIA


SINGAPORE


SOMALIA


SRI LANKA


SUDAN


SYRIA


TAIWAN


TANZANIA


THAILAND


TOGO


TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO


UGANDA


USA


UZBEKISTAN


VIET NAM


YEMEN


ZAMBIA



As in previous years, the vast majority of executions worldwide were carried out in a small handful of countries. In 2006, 91 per cent of all known executions took place in six countries: China, Iran, Pakistan, Iraq, Sudan and the USA. Kuwait had the highest number of executions per capita of population, followed by Iran.


Based on public reports available, Amnesty International estimated that at least 1,010 people were executed in China during the year, although these figures are only the tip

of the iceberg. Credible sources suggest that between 7,500 to 8,000 people were executed in 2006. The official statistics remain a state secret, making monitoring and analysis problematic.


Iran executed 177 people, Pakistan 82 and Iraq and Sudan each at least 65. There were 53 executions in 12 states in the USA.


The worldwide figure for those currently condemned to death and awaiting execution is difficult to assess. The estimated number at the end of 2006 was between 19,185 and 24,646 based on information from human rights groups, media reports and the limited official figures available.


********


Endnote:


(1) This information differs slightly from that shown in Amnesty International’s Annual Report 2007 due to additional information on a further 47 executions in Sudan being received after the Annual Report had been finalised.



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Facts and Figures on the Death Penalty

(1 January 2007)

April 2007

AI Index: ACT 50/002/2007



The following document is regularly updated on the Amnesty International website, www.amnesty.org


1. Abolitionist and Retentionist Countries


Two-thirds of the countries in the world have now abolished the death penalty in law or practice.


Amnesty International's latest information shows that:


  1. 88 countries and territories have abolished the death penalty for all crimes

  2. 11 countries have abolished the death penalty for all but exceptional crimes such as wartime crimes

  3. 29 countries can be considered abolitionist in practice: they retain the death penalty in law but have not carried out any executions for the past 10 years or more


making a total of 128countries which have abolished the death penalty in law or practice.


  1. 69 other countries retain and use the death penalty, but the number of countries which actually execute prisoners in any one year is much smaller.



2. Progress Towards Worldwide Abolition


Over 45countries have abolished the death penalty for all crimes since 1990. They include countries in Africa(recent examples include Cote dIvoire and Liberia,), the Americas(Canada, Mexico, Paraguay), Asia and the Pacific(Bhutan, Samoa, Philippines) and Europeand the South Caucasus (Armenia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Cyprus, Montenegro, and Turkey).



3. Moves to Reintroduce the Death Penalty


Once abolished, the death penalty is seldom reintroduced. Since 1985, 55countries have abolished the death penalty in law or, having previously abolished it for ordinary crimes, have gone on to abolish it for all crimes. During the same period only fourabolitionist countries reintroduced the death penalty. Twoof them, Nepal and Philippines have since abolished the death penalty again. There have been no executions in the other two (Gambia, Papua New Guinea).



4. Death Sentences and Executions


During 2006, at least 1591 prisoners were executed in 25 countries and 3,861 people were sentenced to death in 55 countries. These figures include only cases known to Amnesty International; the true figures are certainly higher.


In 2006 91 per centof all known executions took place in China, Iran, Iraq, Sudan, Pakistan and the USA. Based on public reports available, Amnesty International estimated that at least 1,010 people were executed in China during the year, although these figures are only the tip of the iceberg. Credible sources suggest that between 7,500 to 8,000 people were executed in 2006. The official statistics remain a state secret, making monitoring and analysis problematic.


Iran executed at least 177people, Pakistan at least 82, and Iraq and Sudan each 65 but the totals may have been higher. Fifty-three people were executed in 12 states in the USA.


The worldwide figure for those currently condemned to death and awaiting execution is difficult to assess. The estimated number at the end of 2006 was between 19,185 and 24,646 based on information from human rights groups, media reports and the limited official figures available.



5. Methods of Execution

Executions have been carried out by the following methods since 2000:


Beheading – (in Saudi Arabia, Iraq)

Electrocution – (in USA)

Hanging – (in Egypt, Iran, Japan, Jordan, Pakistan, Singapore and other countries)

Lethal injection – (in China, Guatemala, Philippines, Thailand, USA)

Shooting – (in Belarus, China, Somalia, Taiwan, Uzbekistan, Viet Nam and other countries)

Stoning –(in Afghanistan, Iran)

Stabbing– (in Somalia)



6. Use of the Death Penalty Against Child Offenders


International human rights treaties prohibit anyone under 18 years old at the time of the crime being sentenced to death. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the American Convention on Human Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child all have provisions to this effect. More than 100 countries whose laws still provide for the death penalty for at least some offences have laws specifically excluding the execution of child offenders or may be presumed to exclude such executions by being parties to one or another of the above treaties. A small number of countries, however, continue to execute child offenders. In 2006 Iran executedfour child offenders andPakistan one.


Nine countries since 1990 are known to have executed prisoners who were under 18 years old at the time of the crime – China, Congo (Democratic Republic), Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, USA and Yemen. China, Pakistan, USA and Yemen have now raised the minimum age to 18 in law. The USA and Iran each executed more child offenders than the other seven countries combined before the US Supreme Court ruled in March 2005 that the execution of children under the age of 18 was unconstitutional. Iran has now exceeded the USA's total since 1990 of 19 child executions.


7. The Deterrence Argument


Scientific studies have consistently failed to find convincing evidence that the death penalty deters crime more effectively than other punishments. The most recent survey of research findings on the relation between the death penalty and homicide rates, conducted for the United Nations in 1988 and updated in 2002, concluded: "… it is not prudent to accept the hypothesis that capital punishment deters murder to a marginally greater extent than does the threat and application of the supposedly lesser punishment of life imprisonment."


(Reference: Roger Hood, The Death Penalty: A World-wide Perspective, Oxford, Clarendon Press, third edition, 2002, p. 230)



8. Effect of Abolition on Crime Rates


Reviewing the evidence on the relation between changes in the use of the death penalty and crime rates, the study conducted for the United Nations cited above stated: "The fact that all the evidence continues to point in the same direction is persuasive a priorievidence that countries need not fear sudden and serious changes in the curve of crime if they reduce their reliance upon the death penalty".


Recent crime figures from abolitionist countries fail to show that abolition has harmful effects. In Canada, for example, the homicide rate per 100,000 population fell from a peak of 3.09in 1975, the year before the abolition of the death penalty for murder, to 2.41in 1980, and since then it has declined further. In 2003, 27 years after abolition, the homicide rate was 1.73per 100,000 population, 44per cent lower than in 1975 and the lowest rate in three decades. Although this increased to 2.0in 2005, it remains over one-third lower than when the death penalty was abolished.


(Reference: Roger Hood, The Death Penalty: A World-wide Perspective, Oxford, Clarendon Press, third edition, 2002, p. 214)



9. International Agreements to Abolish the Death Penalty


One of the most important developments in recent years has been the adoption of international treaties whereby states commit themselves to not having the death penalty. Four such treaties now exist:


  1. The Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which has now been ratified by 60 states. Eight other states have signed the Protocol, indicating their intention to become parties to it at a later date.

  2. The Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights to Abolish the Death Penalty which has been ratified by eight states and signed by one other in the Americas.

  3. Protocol No. 6 to the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (European Convention on Human Rights), which has been ratified by 45 European states and signed by one other.

  4. Protocol No. 13 to the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (European Convention on Human Rights), which has been ratified by 37 European states and signed by 7 others.


Protocol No. 6 to the European Convention on Human Rights is an agreement to abolish the death penalty in peacetime. The other two protocols provide for the total abolitionof the death penalty but allow states wishing to do so to retain the death penalty in wartime as an exception. Protocol No. 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights provides for the total abolitionof the death penalty in all circumstances.



10. Execution of the Innocent


As long as the death penalty is maintained, the risk of executing the innocent can never be eliminated. Since 1973 123US prisoners have been released from death row after evidence emerged of their innocence of the crimes for which they were sentenced to death. There were six such cases in 2004, twoin 2005 and one in 2006. Some prisoners had come close to execution after spending many years under sentence of death. Recurring features in their cases include prosecutorial or police misconduct; the use of unreliable witness testimony, physical evidence, or confessions; and inadequate defence representation. Other US prisoners have gone to their deaths despite serious doubts over their guilt. The state of Florida has the highest number of exonerations: 22.


The then Governor of the US state of Illinois, George Ryan, declared a moratorium on executions in January 2000 which remains in force. His decision followed the exoneration of the 13thdeath row prisoner found to have been wrongfully convicted in the state since the USA reinstated the death penalty in 1977. During the same period, 12other Illinois prisoners had been executed. In January 2003 Governor Ryan pardoned four death row prisoners and commuted all 167 other death sentences in Illinois.


The problem of the potential execution of the innocent is not limited to the USA. In 2006, Tanzania released Hassan Mohamed Mtepeka from death row. He was condemned to death in 2004 for the rape and murder of his step daughter. The Appeal Court found that his conviction overwhelmingly rested on circumstantial evidence which "did not irresistibly point to his guilt". In Jamaica, Carl McHargh was released from death row in June 2006 after being acquitted on appeal.



11. The Death Penalty in the USA


In 2004, New York's highest court found the state's death penalty statute unconstitutional. By early 2007, this law had not been replaced.


In 2006, the New Jersey legislature imposed a moratorium in that state, and established a commission to study all aspects of the death penalty in New Jersey. In its final report in January 2007, the commission recommended abolition of the death penalty.


During 2006 executions in a number of other states were effectively on hold because of legal challenges and concerns relating to the lethal injection process.


  1. 53 prisoners were executed in the USA in 2006, bringing to 1,057 the total number executed since the use of the death penalty was resumed in 1977.

  2. Around 3,350 prisoners were under sentence of death as of 1 January 2007.

  3. 38 of the 50 US states provide for the death penalty in law (but see reference to New York above). The death penalty is also provided under US military and federal law.




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LIST OF ABOLITIONIST AND RETENTIONIST COUNTRIES

(1 JANUARY 2007)

April 2007

AI Index: ACT 50/001/2007




One country abolished the death penalty for all crimes in 2006 (Philippines) and two countries removed provisions for the death penalty from their country’s constitutions (Georgia and Moldova). One country (Montenegro) became an independent member state of the United Nations (previously Serbia and Montenegro).Nearly 130 countries in the world have now abolished the death penalty in law or practice.


Attached is a list of countries indicating whether or not their laws provide for the death penalty. For abolitionist countries, information is also given, where available, on the date of abolition and the date of the last execution carried out; and for countries which have abolished the death penalty for all crimes, the date when it was abolished for ordinary offences if this was done before. (The date given for abolition is normally the date when the decision to abolish the death penalty was taken, but if that decision only came into effect several years later, the latter date is given.)


Also attached is a list of countries which have abolished the death penalty since 1976. It shows that in the past decade, an average of three countries a year have abolished the death penalty or, having done so for ordinary offences, have gone on to abolish it for all offences.


As of 1 January 2007, the number of abolitionist and retentionist countries was as follows:



Abolitionist for all crimes 88

Abolitionist for ordinary crimes only 11

Abolitionist in practice 29


Total abolitionist in law or practice 128

Retentionist 69




1. ABOLITIONIST FOR ALL CRIMES


Countries whose laws do not provide for the death penalty for any crime


Abbreviations: Date (A) = date of abolition for all crimes; Date (AO) = date of abolition for ordinary crimes; Date (last ex.) = date of last execution; K= date of last known execution; NK= date of last execution not known; Ind. = no executions since independence




Country

Date(A)Date(AO)Date(last ex.)




ANDORRA

1990


1943





ANGOLA

1992


NK





ARMENIA

2003


NK





AUSTRALIA

1985

1984

1967





AUSTRIA

1968

1950

1950





AZERBAIJAN

1998


1993





BELGIUM

1996


1950





BHUTAN

2004


1964K





BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA

2001

1997

NK





BULGARIA

1998


1989





CAMBODIA

1989


NK





CANADA

1998

1976

1962





CAPE VERDE

1981


1835





COLOMBIA

1910


1909





COSTA RICA

1877


NK





COTE D'IVOIRE

2000


NK





CROATIA

1990


NK





CYPRUS

2002

1983

1962





CZECH REPUBLIC

1990


NK





DENMARK

1978

1933

1950





DJIBOUTI

1995


Ind.





DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

1966


NK

rawnil


ECUADOR

1906

NK




ESTONIA

1998


1991





FINLAND

1972

1949

1944





FRANCE

1981


1977





GEORGIA

1997


1994K





GERMANY

1987


NK





GREECE

2004

1993

1972





GUINEA-BISSAU

1993


1986K





HAITI

1987


1972K





HONDURAS

1956


1940





HUNGARY

1990


1988





ICELAND

1928


1830





IRELAND

1990


1954





ITALY

1994

1947

1947





KIRIBATI



Ind.





LIBERIA

2005


NK





LIECHTENSTEIN

1987


1785





LITHUANIA

1998


1995





LUXEMBOURG

1979


1949





MACEDONIA (former Yug. Rep.)

1991


NK





MALTA

2000

1971

1943





MARSHALL ISLANDS



Ind.





MAURITIUS

1995


1987





dth3043




MEXICO

2005


1937

MICRONESIA (Federated States)



Ind.

MOLDOVA

1995


NK





MONACO

1962


1847





MONTENEGRO

2002


NK





MOZAMBIQUE

1990


1986





NAMIBIA

1990


1988K





NEPAL

1997

1990

1979





NETHERLANDS

1982

1870

1952





NEW ZEALAND

1989

1961

1957





NICARAGUA

1979


1930





NIUE



NK





NORWAY

1979

1905

1948





PALAU



NK





PANAMA



1903K





PARAGUAY

1992


1928





PHILIPPINES

2006


1999





POLAND

1997


1988





PORTUGAL

1976

1867

1849K





ROMANIA

1989


1989





SAMOA

2004


Ind.





SAN MARINO

1865

1848

1468K





SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE

1990


Ind.





SENEGAL

2004


1967





trftsWidthB3




SERBIA

2002


NK

SEYCHELLES

1993


Ind.

SLOVAK REPUBLIC

1990


NK





SLOVENIA

1989


NK





SOLOMON ISLANDS


1966

Ind.





SOUTH AFRICA

1997

1995

1991





SPAIN

1995

1978

1975





SWEDEN

1972

1921

1910





SWITZERLAND

1992

1942

1944





TIMOR-LESTE

1999


NK





TURKEY

2004

2002

1984





TURKMENISTAN

1999


NK





TUVALU



Ind.





UKRAINE

1999


NK





UNITED KINGDOM

1998

1973

1964





URUGUAY

1907


NK





VANUATU



Ind.





VATICAN CITY STATE

1969


NK





VENEZUELA

1863


NK








2. ABOLITIONIST FOR ORDINARY CRIMES ONLY


Countries whose laws provide for the death penalty only for exceptional crimes such as crimes under military law or crimes committed in exceptional circumstances, such as wartime crimes


Abbreviations: Date (AO) = date of abolition for ordinary crimes; Date (last ex.) = date of last execution; K= date of last known execution; NK= date of last execution not known; Ind.= no executions since independence



Country

Date(AO)

Date(last ex.)

ALBANIA

2000

NK




ARGENTINA

1984

NK




BOLIVIA

1997

1974




BRAZIL

1979

1855

15

CHILE

1985



COOK ISLANDS


NK




EL SALVADOR

1983

1973K




FIJI

1979

1964




ISRAEL

1954

1962




LATVIA

1999

1996




PERU

1979

1979




2001


3. ABOLITIONIST IN PRACTICE


Countries that retain the death penalty for ordinary crimes such as murder but can be considered abolitionist in practice in that they have not executed anyone during the past 10 years and are believed to have a policy or established practice of not carrying out executions. The list also includes countries which have made an international commitment not to use the death penalty.


Abbreviations: Date (last ex.) = date of last execution; K= date of last known execution; Ind.= no executions since independence


Country

Date(last ex.)

ALGERIA

1993



BENIN

1987



BRUNEI DARUSSALAM

1957K



BURKINA FASO

1988



CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC

1981



CONGO (Republic)

1982



GABON

NK



GAMBIA

1981



GHANA

NK



GRENADA

1978



KENYA

1987



KYRGYZSTAN

1998



MADAGASCAR

1958K



MALAWI

1992



MALDIVES

1952K



MALI

1980



MAURITANIA

1987



MOROCCO

1993



MYANMAR

NK



NAURU

Ind.



NIGER

1976K



PAPUA NEW GUINEA

1950



RUSSIAN FEDERATION

1999



SRI LANKA

1976



SURINAME

1982



SWAZILAND

NK



TOGO

NK



f0 TONGA

1982



TUNISIA

1991




4. RETENTIONIST


Countries and territories that retain the death penalty for ordinary crimes




AFGHANISTAN

ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA


BAHAMAS


BAHRAIN


BANGLADESH


BARBADOS


BELARUS


BELIZE


BOTSWANA


BURUNDI


CAMEROON


CHAD


CHINA


COMOROS


CONGO (Democratic Republic)


CUBA


DOMINICA


EGYPT


EQUATORIAL GUINEA


ERITREA


ETHIOPIA


GUATEMALA


GUINEA


GUYANA


INDIA


INDONESIA


IRAN


IRAQ


JAMAICA


JAPAN


JORDAN


KAZAKSTAN


KOREA (North)


KOREA (South)


KUWAIT


LAOS


LEBANON


LESOTHO


LIBYA


MALAYSIA


MONGOLIA


NIGERIA


OMAN


PAKISTAN


PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY


QATAR


RWANDA


SAINT CHRISTOPHER & NEVIS


SAINT LUCIA


SAINT VINCENT & GRENADINES


SAUDI ARABIA


SIERRA LEONE


SINGAPORE


SOMALIA


SUDAN


SYRIA


TAIWAN


A3

TAJIKISTAN

TANZANIA

THAILAND


TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO


UGANDA


UNITED ARAB EMIRATES


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA


UZBEKISTAN


VIET NAM


YEMEN


ZAMBIA


ZIMBABWE







COUNTRIES WHICH HAVE ABOLISHED THE DEATH PENALTY SINCE 1976


1976:PORTUGALabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1978:DENMARKabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1979:LUXEMBOURG, NICARAGUAand NORWAYabolished the death penalty for all crimes. BRAZIL, FIJIand PERUabolished the death penalty for ordinary crimes.


1981:FRANCEand CAPE VERDEabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1982:The NETHERLANDSabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1983:CYPRUSand EL SALVADORabolished the death penalty for ordinary crimes.


1984:ARGENTINAabolished the death penalty for ordinary crimes.


1985:AUSTRALIAabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1987:HAITI, LIECHTENSTEINand the GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC (1)abolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1989:CAMBODIA, NEW ZEALAND, ROMANIA and SLOVENIA(2)abolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1990:ANDORRA, CROATIA (2), the CZECH AND SLOVAK FEDERAL REPUBLIC (3), HUNGARY, IRELAND, MOZAMBIQUE, NAMIBIAand SAO TOMÉ AND PRíNCIPEabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1992:ANGOLA, PARAGUAYand SWITZERLANDabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1993:GUINEA-BISSAU, HONG KONG(4)and SEYCHELLESabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1994:ITALYabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1995:DJIBOUTI, MAURITIUS, MOLDOVAand SPAINabolished the death penalty for all crimes.

1996:BELGIUMabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1997:GEORGIA, NEPAL, POLANDand SOUTH AFRICAabolished the death penalty for all crimes. BOLIVIAabolished the death penalty for ordinary crimes.


1998:AZERBAIJAN, BULGARIA, CANADA, ESTONIA, LITHUANIAand the UNITED KINGDOMabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


1999:EAST TIMOR (nowTIMOR-LESTE), TURKMENISTANand UKRAINE abolished the death penalty for all crimes. LATVIA(5)abolished the death penalty for ordinary crimes.


2000:ALBANIA(6)abolished the death penalty for ordinary crimes. COTE DIVOIREand MALTAabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


2001: BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA(7)abolished the death penalty for all crimes. CHILEabolished the death penalty for ordinary crimes.


2002: CYPRUS andYUGOSLAVIA (now separate states of SERBIA and MONTENEGRO(9))abolished the death penalty for all crimes.


2003: ARMENIAabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


2004: BHUTAN, GREECE (8), SAMOA, SENEGAL and TURKEYabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


2005: LIBERIA (10)and MEXICOabolished the death penalty for all crimes.


2006: PHILIPPINES abolished the death penalty for all crimes.