Acceptance International: A THOUSAND PEOPLE FACE THE DEATH PENALTY IN IRAQ; AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL REPORTS A THOUSAND PEOPLE FACE THE DEATH PENALTY IN IRAQ; AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL REPORTS ================================================================================ admin on 25/12/2009 16:05:00 Following the US-led invasion in 2003 which overthrew Saddam Hussain, the death penalty was suspended promptly on 10 June 2003 by the Head of the interim Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), within a month of his taking charge. However, just over a year later, on 8 August 2004, the Iraqi interim government which replaced the CPA restored the death penalty. Since then, the present government has widened both its scope and its application. The use of the death penalty in Iraq lacks transparency. The authorities publicly justify the use of the death penalty as a response to the continuing high level of political violence, but they provide very little information on executions and some have been carried out secretly. For example, on 10 June 2009 some 19 people, including one woman, were executed, but this was not officially announced via the media; the information was leaked. Many of the death sentences were handed down following court proceedings which did not meet international standards for fair trials, as international human rights law requires. Under the rule of Saddam Hussain, prior to March 2003, the Iraqi authorities used the death penalty on a very large scale. A wide range of activities could incur the death penalty, including some not normally considered crimes, such as expressing political dissent and opposing the policies of Saddam Hussain and his ruling Ba’ath party. Amnesty International was never able to establish precisely how many people were sentenced to death and executed each year. The Iraqi authorities provided no statistics and often did not disclose publicly when executions were carried out. Those executed included many members of banned secular parties and religious organizations and other suspected government opponents, students, journalists, businessmen, and army deserters. Still others were subjected to enforced disappearances and were killed out of hand, without any semblance of legality. REASONS FOR REINSTATEMENT The current Iraqi government was elected in December 2005 and took office in May 2006. It argues that the death penalty is needed to reduce the widespread violence in the country, yet such violence has continued unabated since the death penalty was restored. Armed groups have continued to carry out bomb attacks killing large numbers of civilians, including members of ethnic and religious minority groups. These attacks – many of which have been carried out by suicide bombers who, by their very nature, are unlikely to be deterred by the prospect of the death penalty – recently increased in the run-up to and following the 30 June deadline for the pullout of US troops from Iraq’s cities and towns. Despite this, senior Iraqi government officials continue to publicly justify and support the use of the death penalty, although the country’s President, Jalal Talabani, is a notable exception. He has long opposed the death penalty, but has delegated his power of ratification of death sentences to his two deputies so that executions continue despite his stated personal commitment to abolition. Once a death sentence is upheld by the Court of Cassation, it is referred to the Presidential Council for ratification and implementation. Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Kamil al- Maliki has repeatedly defended the use of the death penalty and he has called for the execution of former senior members of the Ba’ath party who have been sentenced to death for crimes committed under Saddam Hussain. On 31 May 2009, for example, he declared that former officials under Saddam Hussain would be executed if they were found to have ordered the poison gas attacks on Halabja and other villages in 1988 which killed thousands of members of the Kurdish minority. In a speech to relatives of the victims of Halabja, he stated: “I promise you, we will not keep silent when it comes to applying the death penalty against all the criminals who are condemned [in this case]”. Iraq’s Human Rights Minister Dr Wajdan Mikhail Salam was also reported in the Spanish newspaper El Mundo on 28 May 2009 to say that “capital punishment is not applied easily [in Iraq], it takes many steps”, but that the situation “requires the application of the death penalty… I think at the moment the death penalty is very necessary in Iraq. It is not the time to abolish it. And you can be sure that it is not easy to sentence anybody to death.” Previously, she had suggested that the government might abolish the death penalty, telling the UN Human Rights Council in March 2007: “we are working at the present moment in order to pave the way to eliminate capital punishment in Iraq, after restricting it to the largest possible extent”. Amnesty International is disappointed that a minister whose portfolio is to advance the cause of human rights protection should advocate the death penalty, and urges her and her colleagues instead to prioritize the promotion and protection of human rights and eradicate executions as a matter of urgency. SCOPE OF THE DEATH PENALTY The Iraqi Penal Code of 1969, which remains in force, prescribes the death penalty for a wide range of offences. These include premeditated murder, all crimes compromising the internal security of the state, attacks on means of transportation resulting in fatalities, attempting to overthrow the government by violent means, and damaging public property. Since 2003, additional capital crimes have been created under the Anti-Terrorism law of 2005 and Law 10 of 2005, which established the Statute of the Supreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunal (SICT) which may impose the death penalty for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and membership of and supporting armed groups. The Iraqi Internal Security forces’ Penal Code, enacted in February 2008, and the Iraqi Military Code, promulgated in April 2007, also prescribe the death penalty for offences committed by members of the military, police and other security forces. These include passing on secrets, plans and instructions to an armed group, passing on state secrets to other countries directly or indirectly, and deliberately sabotaging and damaging means of communication, transportation, weapons and explosives. Decree Number 3 of 2004, issued by the then Iraqi interim government to reinstate the death penalty, prescribes the death penalty even for crimes that do not have lethal consequences, such as carrying out abductions not resulting in death. International human rights treaties such as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), ratified by Iraq in 1971, stipulate that the death penalty may only be imposed for the most serious crimes. Under international law, “most serious” means that it should be applied as a most exceptional measure, and should not go beyond intentional crimes, with lethal or other extremely grave consequences. THE COURTS AND UNFAIR TRIALS The vast majority of death sentences have been passed by the Central Criminal Court of Iraq (CCCI) in Baghdad and in the governorates. The CCCI was established by the Coalition Provisional Authority in June 2003 with jurisdiction over crimes relating to terrorism, sectarian violence, organized crime and government corruption. Trials before the CCCI consistently fall short of international standards for fair trials. Defendants commonly complain that “confessions” were extracted from them under torture during pretrial interrogation, often when they were held incommunicado in police stations or in detention facilities controlled by the Ministry of Interior. These “confessions” are then often used as evidence against them at their trials, and are accepted by the courts without taking any or adequate steps to investigate defendants’ allegations of torture. Defendants also complain that they are not able to choose their own defence lawyers; those tried before the CCCI on capital charges have defence lawyers appointed by the court if they are unable to pay for defence counsel, but the quality of such representation is low. Some lawyers refuse to represent defendants accused of “terrorism”, mostly Sunni Muslims, fearing reprisals by armed militia groups linked to Shi’a political parties represented in the Iraqi Council of Representatives (parliament). Trials before the SICT also fall short of international standards for fair trials. The SICT was set up to try Saddam Hussain and officials from the former Ba’ath administration accused of war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity. Proceedings before this tribunal have been marred by political interference, undermining its independence and impartiality. It was reported in September 2008 that the Iraq government had engineered the dismissal of one of the judges who had tried Saddam Hussain shortly before the year-long trial ended in 2006, replacing the judge with one considered more likely to support the imposition of the death penalty. The tribunal has also failed to ensure the safety of defence lawyers, witnesses and others. A number of lawyers, judges and prosecutors have been murdered by armed groups. Since its establishment the SICT has sentenced at least 11 people to death. Four, including Saddam Hussain, have been executed, while at least seven are still on death row. SAFEGUARDS FOR FAIR TRIALS International law requires that the death penalty “can only be carried out pursuant to a final judgement rendered by a competent court” (Article 6.2 of the ICCPR). This includes respecting the absolute prohibition of torture and other illtreatment, which is considered customary in international law and applies to all states. As a consequence of that absolute prohibition, any statement extracted as a result of torture or other ill-treatment should never be used as evidence in any proceedings against the detainee. International law requires a number of other safeguards in order to ensure the right to fair trial. These include the right to a public hearing by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal; the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty, the right to have access to a lawyer of one’s own choosing, the right to call witnesses for the defence and the highest standards for the gathering and assessment of evidence. SECRECY SURROUNDING RECENT EXECUTIONS In the face of criticism from the UN, the European Union and international human rights organizations, in recent months the Iraqi authorities have disclosed little information or statistics about executions. In July 2009, at least 1,000 prisoners were believed to be on death row, including about 150 prisoners who had exhausted all means of appeal or clemency. According to the Iraqi Human Rights Ministry’s report for 2008, some 956 prisoners were under a death sentence at the end of 2008, 751 of whom were held in prisons and detention facilities controlled by the Ministry of Justice, including 12 women. The other 205 prisoners were held in prisons and detention facilities controlled by the Ministry of Interior. At least seven people sentenced to death by the SICT are being held by the US military in Camp Cropper in Baghdad. Between January and early November 2008, 365 people were sentenced to death, according to the Iraqi Supreme Judicial Council. So far this year Amnesty International has recorded at least 60 death sentences issued by Iraqi courts.