176 condemned prisoners in Ghana expected to receive reprieve as death penalty is abolished

176 condemned prisoners in Ghana expected to receive reprieve as death penalty is abolished

Ghana has ​become the 29th country in Africa to abolish the death penalty in a move hailed by human rights activists.

The decision means that the 176​ people currently on⁤ death row,⁢ including six women, are likely to ​have ‍their​ sentences commuted ‍to life imprisonment.

On Tuesday, Ghana’s ‌parliament⁢ voted to amend⁢ the country’s⁤ criminal offences act, removing‌ the use of capital punishment for crimes including murder, genocide, piracy‌ and smuggling.

The death sentence can still ‌be‌ given for acts​ of ‍high treason, and ⁤campaigners cautioned that the country’s constitution would have to change for a complete removal of the penalty.

Ghana⁣ has not ‍carried⁤ out​ an execution since 1993, but courts have continued to hand down death ‍sentences, including seven last year. The country’s president, Nana Akufo-Addo, needs to sign the bill into‌ law​ before it ⁢comes ⁤into force.

Francis-Xavier Kojo Sosu, the Ghanian MP behind ​the bill, hailed​ the ⁣decision. “I have seen firsthand that the death⁢ penalty⁤ does ⁢not bring a sense of justice or⁤ closure to the​ families of crime victims, and⁢ neither does it deter offenders,” he told⁤ the Guardian.

“I have also seen that those sentenced to death tend to be vulnerable individuals ⁢from deprived backgrounds, who have often experienced deep personal trauma. It was my view that we as a nation were better than this. I introduced these bills because I wanted ⁣the courts to cease imposing an inhuman punishment.”

Ghana is the 124th country to abolish ⁣the death penalty; 41 other countries are considered to have de ​facto bans as they⁤ have not carried out an ⁤execution for more than 10 ​years. In 2022, death sentences were confirmed ⁤in 52‌ countries, four less than in 2021, according to Amnesty International.

At least 883 executions were‌ recorded last year – a 53% rise since 2021. In the past five years,​ Sierra‌ Leone, Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea and Zambia have‍ abolished‌ the death penalty.

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Samira Daoud, ⁤Amnesty International’s west and central Africa⁢ director, said⁢ the vote was “a victory for all⁤ those who⁣ have ⁣tirelessly ‍campaigned to consign ​this cruel ⁤punishment to history and strengthen the protection of the right to life”.

She ⁣added: “Although a landmark decision, the total abolition of this ⁤draconian⁢ punishment would not be complete ​without revising the constitution, which still provides for high treason to be punishable by ​death.”

2023-07-26 07:33:26
Link from www.theguardian.com

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