UN RIGHTS CHIEF URGES MALDIVES NOT TO RESUME EXECUTIONS

High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein

09 August 2016 :

The United Nations’ human rights chief is urging the Maldives to stick to a decades-long moratorium on imposing the death penalty, citing fears that three men are at “imminent risk” of execution.
Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein said in a statement issued in Geneva on August 9 that the Maldives long provided “important leadership” in efforts to end the use of the death penalty and it is “deeply regrettable that a series of steps have been taken to resume executions in the country.”
In June, the Supreme Court confirmed the death penalty for a 22-year-old man convicted of killing a lawmaker in 2012. Shortly before that, the government had amended rules to allow execution by lethal injection or hanging, indicating that the country’s unofficial six-decade moratorium on executions will soon end.
 

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