Ikke færre end 116 dødsdømte har udtømt alle appelmuligheder i det kommunistisk-styrede land i Sydøstasien, som gennem årene har modtaget så megen dansk udviklingsbistand – de kan blive henrettet når som helst.
GENEVA, 9 August 2013 (UN News Service): The United Nations human rights office Friday said that the resumption of the death penalty in Viet Nam represents a “major setback” in the country’s human rights record.
A 27-year-old man was executed on 6 August in Hanoi by lethal injection (giftsprøjte). The execution is the first in the last 18 months in the country.
“We are dismayed by (bedrøvet over) the resumption of the death penalty by Viet Nam,” the spokesperson for the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), Cécile Pouilly, said in Geneva, Switzerland.
The office is also “deeply concerned” for the lives of some 116 death row prisoners in the country who have exhausted their appeals are now facing imminent execution.
“We urge the Government not to carry out further executions and to join the growing number of Member States that have established a moratorium (midlertidigt stop) on the death penalty or abolished (opgivet) this practice altogether,” Ms. Pouilly said.
She noted that 19 States in the Asia-Pacific region have stepped away from the practice.
“We also call upon the Government to declassify the data on the use of the death penalty as a state secret, recalling the importance of transparent and effective public debate on the subject ensuring that the public has access to balanced and accurate information,” she added.
Last month, High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay wrote to Prime Minister Nguyen Tan advocating for the abolition of the death penalty in Viet Nam.
Ms. Pillay noted that Viet Nam still retains the death penalty for several offences that do not meet the threshold of most serious crimes.
In June, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed particular concern that the application of the death penalty in countries where it is still practiced “is often cloaked in secrecy,” and that a lack of data on the number of executions or individuals on death row impedes an informed national debate on the issue.
He urged Member States to stop the use of “this inhumane practice,” particularly in countries that have resumed executions after a moratorium.
Since 2007, the UN General Assembly has adopted four resolutions calling on States to establish a moratorium on the use of the death penalty with a view to abolition.
About 150 of the UN’s 193 Member States have either abolished the death penalty or no longer practice it.