Capital punishment in Belarus
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The provision for Capital Punishment in Belarus has been a part of this country since gaining independence from the Soviet Union. The current national constitution prescribes this punishment for "grave crimes." Later laws have clarified the specific crimes for which capital punishment can be used. Capital punishment can be issued for crimes that occur against the state or against individuals. A few non-violent crimes can be issued with the sentence of capital punishment.
Despite a referendum on the issue, the Belarusian government has taken steps to change the way capital punishment is sentenced and carried out.[1] International organizations, such as the United Nations, have criticized the methods Belarus uses when carrying out capital punishment. The use of capital punishment is one factor keeping the country out of the Council of Europe.[2]
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[edit] Legislation
Article 24 of the Constitution of Belarus states that:
“ | Until its abolition, the death sentence may be applied in accordance with the law as an exceptional penalty for especially grave crimes and only in accordance with the verdict of a court of law."[3] | ” |
As per the Criminal Code of the Republic of Belarus, capital punishment can be awarded for the following acts:
- Launching or conducting aggressive war (Article 122, Part 2)
- Murder of a representative of a foreign state or international organization in order to provoke international complications or war (Article 124, Part 2)
- International terrorism (Article 126)
- Genocide (Article 127)
- Crime against humanity (Article 128)
- Application of weapons of mass destruction under international treaties of the Republic of Belarus (Article 134)
- Violation of the war laws and usage (Article 135, Part 3)
- Murder committed under aggravating circumstances (Article 139, Part 2)
- Terrorism (Article 289, Part 3)
- Treason connected with murder (Article 356, Part 2)
- Conspiracy to seize state power (Article 357, Part 3)
- Terrorist acts (Article 359)
- Sabotage (Article 360, Part 2)
- Murder of a police officer. (Article 362) [4]
Most of the death penalty convictions were for murder committed under aggravating circumstances.[5] Court proceedings involving capital cases must involve a "collegial consideration," consisting of one judge and two People's assessors. The People's assessors are chosen from the general population, similar to the jury system.[6]
Over the years, the number of offenses inviting death penalty and the type of convicts eligible for the same have reduced. In 1993, four economic crimes which would have resulted in death penalty during the Soviet era were removed from the list of capital offenses by a vote of parliament and were replaced by prison terms without parole.[7] Although the total number of categories of crime qualifying for capital punishment declined during this time, Presidential Decree No. 21, issued on 21 October 1997, added "terrorism" to the list of capital offenses.[8] When the Criminal Code was updated in 1999, the number of capital offenses was further reduced. This reduction was assisted by the introduction of life imprisonment in December 1997.[1] Since March 1, 1994, women are ineligible for capital punishment and those under the age of 18 at the time of the crime or over 65 at the time of sentencing were exempt from capital punishment since January of 2001.[9] Those who are mentally ill may have their death sentence commuted.[10] Under Article 84 of the Constitution, the president "may grant pardons to convicted citizens". [3] From June 30, 2003 to June 30, 2005, President Alexander Lukashenko granted two pardons to death row inmates and denied one such request.[11]
In 2000, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe condemned:
"in the strongest possible terms the executions in Belarus and deplores the fact that Belarus is currently the only country in Europe where the death penalty is enforced and, moreover, is regularly and widely enforced". [12]
Belarus is not the only European nation that allows the death penalty during times of war; it is also allowed in Latvia[13] in such circumstances. Belarus, however, is the only European nation that issues the sentence during times of peace as well as war. Regardless of the fact that Council member Latvia does have limited provision for capital punishment, Council members suggested in 2001 that Belarus abolish capital punishment before it can apply for membership in the Council.[2] Belarus (as the Byelorussia SSR) signed the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights in 1973.[14] This convention, however, does not abolish the death penalty, but it imposes certain conditions on its implementation and use.
[edit] Method
Before execution, all prisoners on death row are transferred to Minsk Detention Center No. 1 (СИЗО, or SIZO No. 1), located in the capital city of Minsk.[15] The method used to carry out the sentence is execution by shooting.[5] Instead of a squad of shooters, the condemned is shot in the back of the head by a single shooter.[15]The executioner is a member of the "Committee for the execution of sentences," which also chooses the area where the execution will take place.[15] After the sentence is carried out, a prison doctor and other prison officials certify that the execution has been carried out, and a death certificate is prepared. The remains of the condemned are buried secretly, and the family is notified that the execution took place.[5] Col. Oleg Alkayev, who was a director of SIZO No. 1, claimed that about 130 executions took place at the prison between December 1996 and May 2001, when he left Belarus to live in exile in Berlin, Germany.[16]
The United Nations Human Rights Committee issued the following opinion of the execution process in Belarus after the mother of subsequently-executed prisoner Anton Bondarenko petitioned the Committee to spare her son's life:
“ | [the process has] the effect of intimidating or punishing families by intentionally leaving them in a state of uncertainty and mental distress…[and that the] authorities’ initial failure to notify the author of the scheduled date for the execution of her son, and their subsequent persistent failure to notify her of the location of her son’s grave amounts to inhuman treatment of the author, in violation of article 7 of the Covenant [prohibiting torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment].[17] | ” |
[edit] Number of executions
The following is a rough estimate of number of executions carried out since 1990, as per Belarusian Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD):
- 1990 - 20
- 1991 - 14
- 1993 - 20
- 1994 - 24
- 1995 - 46
- 1997 - 46
- 1998 - 47
- 1999 - 13
- 2000 - 4
- 2001 - 7 [5]
The exact number of people executed in Belarus is not known, since the last documents released by the Belarusian Government were in 2006.[18] Due to some of the practices of the MVD, such as the non-disclosure of the graves of the executed, this is a violation of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe protocol to make information about capital punishment open to the public.[19]
[edit] Public opinion
In a 1996 referendum, one of the seven questions asked was about the opinion of Belarusian people about abolishing the death penalty. According to the results of this referendum, 80.44% of Belorussians were against abolishing the death penalty.[20] However, at the time of the referendum, the longest available prison sentence was 15 years. Since then, the sentence of life-long imprisonment was introduced, in December 1997. There have not been more recent surveys to determine whether the change in maximum prison sentence affected public sentiment about the death penalty[7]
[edit] Court cases
On March 11, 2004, the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Belarus came to the conclusion that two articles of the Criminal Code were incompatible with the Constitution of Belarus. The Court stated that either the President or the National Assembly had to make the decision to suspend or completely abolish the death penalty.[21] Subsequently, in October 2005, the Parliament adopted an amendment to the Criminal Code declaring that the continued use of the death penalty was on a temporary basis only.[22] The last known death sentence was issued on May 22 2007 to former MVD Commander Aleksandr Sergeychik. He was convicted of murder, rape, embezzlement; the exact execution date, location of his execution and his burial location was not stated in the court order.[23]
[edit] References
- ^ a b Embassy of Belarus in the United Kingdom Capital Punishment in Belarus and Changes of Belarus Criminal Legislation related thereto. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
- ^ a b Belpan (2001-04-05). Seminar on death penalty abolition held in Brest. BrestOnline. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ a b http://law.by/work/EnglPortal.nsf/6e1a652fbefce34ac2256d910056d559/d93bc51590cf7f49c2256dc0004601db?OpenDocument Constitution of the Republic of Belarus]. Accessed on 5 September 2005.
- ^ Embassy of the Republic of Belarus in the United States. On the Use of Death Penalty in the Republic of Belarus. Published 2004. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
- ^ a b c d газете «Труд-7» (2002-11-06). Смертная казнь (Russian). BrestOnline. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ DECISION OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT OF THE REPUBLIC OF BELARUS OF 17.04.2001 No. D-114/2001. Constitutional Court of the Republic of Belarus (2001-04-17). Retrieved on 2008-03-11.
- ^ a b "Belarus and Uzbekistan: the last executioners." Amnesty International. Accessed on 5 September 2005.
- ^ Amnesty International (1997-11-10). Belarus: Findings of Human Rights Committee confirm worsening human rights situation. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ Уголовный кодекс Республики Беларусь (Russian) (2006-04-02). Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ Embassy of the Republic of Belarus in the United States. On the Use of Death Penalty in the Republic of Belarus. Published 2004. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
- ^ Embassy of Belarus in the United Kingdom Capital Punishment in Belarus and Changes of Belarus Criminal Legislation related thereto. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
- ^ Legisltationline.org Death Penalty - Belarus. Published November 2004. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
- ^ Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Latvia Latvia set to remove capital punishment from criminal law. Published January 7, 2002.
- ^ United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. Signatory nations of the ICCPR. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
- ^ a b c Human Rights Committee (2003-04-24). Communication No 887/1999 : Belarus. 24/04/2003. United Nations Organization. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ Belarus Executioner Accuses President of Murder. Reuters (2001-08-29). Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ Human Rights Committee (2003). Communication No 886/1999 : Belarus. 28/04/2003. United Nations. Retrieved on 2007-11-17.
- ^ International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights (2006). IHF Intervention to the 2006 OSCE Human Dimension Implementation Meeting (PDF). Retrieved on 2007-11-17.
- ^ OSCE Comments on the Death Penalty (PDF). Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (1994). Retrieved on 2007-11-17.
- ^ Центральной комиссии Республики Беларусь по выборам и проведению республиканских референдумов (Russian) (1996). Retrieved on 2007-11-17.
- ^ Judgment of the Constitutional Court of March 11, 2004 On the conformity between the Constitution of the Republic of Belarus, the international treaties to which the Republic of Belarus is a party and the provisions of the Criminal Code of the Republic of Belarus stipulating application of the death penalty as a punishment, accessed on May 28, 2006.
- ^ Belarus amends criminal code Interfax on October 26, 2005, accessed on May 28, 2006.
- ^ BelaPAN (2007). Бывший милиционер-убийца Сергейчик расстрелян (Russian). Retrieved on 2007-11-28.
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