DEATH PENALTY IN 2020: EXECUTIONS DOWN A QUARTER – AMNESTY’S NEW REPORT

21 April 2021 :

The number of executions recorded by Amnesty International during 2020 fell by a quarter compared to the previous year - one of the findings of the organisation’s authoritative annual overview of capital punishment across the world, published on 21 April 2021.
Amnesty’s 63-page report - Death Sentences and Executions 2020 - records 483 executions in 18 countries during 2020. This figure - though still representing a shocking loss of life, with many executed after grossly unfair trials - represents a decrease of 26% compared to 2019’s 657 executions, and a fall of 70% from a peak of 1,634 executions in 2015.
Most strikingly, the number of executions recorded in Saudi Arabia dropped by 85% - from 184 in 2019, to 27 in 2020. Similarly, executions more than halved in Iraq, from 100 in 2019 to 45 in 2020. No executions were recorded in Bahrain, Belarus, Japan, Pakistan, Singapore or Sudan - all countries which executed prisoners in 2019.
Amnesty’s report shows that last year’s fall in executions was due to a reduction in executions in some “retentionist” countries which habitually use capital punishment and, to a lesser extent, due to halts in executions because of the coronavirus pandemic.
However, Amnesty cautioned that its figures were only minimum known ones - as several countries either conceal their death penalty data or provide only limited information.
The Chinese authorities consider information on the country’s executions and death sentences a state secret, preventing independent scrutiny, so Amnesty’s figures do not include data from China. China is believed to execute thousands of people each year, meaning that last year it will have been - once again - the world’s most prolific user of capital punishment.
Second to China was Iran (with at least 246 executions), then Egypt (at least 107), Iraq (at least 45) and Saudi Arabia (27). Between them, Iran, Egypt, Iraq and Saudi Arabia accounted for the vast majority (88%) of all known executions during 2020. Although recorded executions in Iran were lower than in earlier years (part of a recent downward trend), Iran increasingly used the death penalty as a weapon of political repression against dissidents, protesters and members of ethnic minority groups.
Overall, Amnesty’s report recorded executions in the following countries: China: believed to be thousands; Iran: at least 246; Egypt: at least 107; Iraq: at least 45; Saudi Arabia: at least 27; USA: 17; Somalia: at least 11; Yemen: at least five; India: four; Oman: four; Botswana: three; South Sudan: at least two; Sudan: at least two; Bangladesh: two; Qatar: one; Taiwan: one; North Korea: unknown number; Syria: unknown number; Vietnam: unknown number.
Though the overall global trend was downward, some countries increased the number of executions they carried out - showing a chilling disregard for human life at a time when the world’s attention was largely focused on protecting people from a deadly virus.
Most notably, Egypt tripled its yearly execution figure compared to the previous year, becoming the world’s third most frequent executioner in 2020. At least 23 of those put to death were condemned in cases relating to political violence after grossly unfair trials which saw forced “confessions” and other serious human rights violations, including torture and enforced disappearances. A large spike in executions occurred in October and November, when the Egyptian authorities executed at least 57 people - 53 men and four women.
In the USA, the only country in the Americas to carry out executions during 2020, the Trump administration resumed federal executions after a 17-year-long gap and put ten people to death in under six months.
India, Oman, Qatar and Taiwan also resumed executions. Covid-19 restrictions had concerning implications for access to legal counsel and the right to a fair trial in several countries, including the USA, where defence lawyers said they were unable to carry out crucial investigative work or meet clients face-to-face.
In Saudi Arabia, executions declined sharply from 184 in 2019 to 27 last year - the lowest number recorded by Amnesty since 2010. The Saudi Arabia Human Rights Commission attributed the drop in part to “a moratorium on the death penalty in drug-related offences”, though no moratorium was officially announced in 2020.
The reduction may also have been due to disruption caused by the Covid-19 pandemic and a desire to avoid international criticism overshadowing Saudi Arabia’s presidency of the G20 and its hosting of the G20 summit. For the five months prior to the summit, no executions were carried out in Saudi Arabia. However, executions resumed soon after the country’s G20 presidency ended on 30 November. 
The number of death sentences known to have been imposed worldwide (at least 1,477) was also down by 36% compared to 2019.
Amnesty recorded decreases in 30 out of 54 countries where death sentences were known to have been imposed. These appeared to be linked in several cases to delays and deferrals in judicial proceedings put in place in response to the pandemic. However, Nigeria and Singapore sentenced people to death via Zoom due to Covid-19 related restrictions.
Many countries in the Asia-Pacific region continued to violate international law and standards which prohibit the use of the death penalty for crimes that do not involve intentional killing. The death penalty was handed down for drug offences in China, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vietnam; for corruption in China and Vietnam; and for blasphemy in Pakistan. In Bangladesh and Pakistan, death sentences were imposed by courts established through special legislation and which usually follow different procedures from ordinary courts. In the Maldives, five people who were below 18 years of age at the time of the crime remained under sentence of death.
During 2020, Chad and the US state of Colorado abolished the death penalty, while Kazakhstan committed to abolition under international law and Barbados concluded reforms to repeal the mandatory death penalty.
As of April 2021, 108 countries have abolished the death penalty for all crimes and 144 countries have abolished it in law or practice.

 

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