FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 3, 2019
Note: Broadcast
journalist Deandrè Williamson represented The Bahamas Press Club 2014 at the 7th
World Conference Against Death Penalty, which was held in Brussels from
February 26 to March 1st, 2019. Miss Williamson is a former ZNS news reporter, and a
reporter at JCN. See below, her report from the historic Conference:
ECPM
Urges Bahamian Govt to Abolish Death Penalty
‘Fake
Solidarity Hinders Caribbean on Death Penalty Abolition’
Deandre Williamson
Journal Staff Writer
BRUSSELS,
BELGIUM – Together Against the Death Penalty (ECPM) Executive Director Raphael
Chenuil-Hazan urged the Bahamian government abolish the death penalty and break
away from what he calls the “fake solidarity” that seems to be preventing The
Bahamas and other English-speaking Caribbean countries from becoming
abolitionist states.
Chenuil-Hazan
made this plea to the government during an interview with The Bahama Journal at
the 7th World Congress Against the Death Penalty in Brussels,
Belgium where he expressed concerns over The Bahamas keeping the death penalty
as law and not using it.
Other
English-speaking Caribbean countries do the same and Chenuil-Hazan considers
this practice as a bad example.
“It’s
kind of shaming and I don’t like shaming,” he said. “But it’s a reality of
original solidarity. I think that some
countries in the Caribbean should stop this fake regional solidarity.”
ECPM
is a French nongovernmental organization with a mission to abolish the death
penalty worldwide.
Although
The Bahamas is identified by Amnesty International as one of the 52
retentionist states around the world where the death penalty is implemented,
The Bahamas has a de facto moratorium on the death penalty.
The
last execution took place in The Bahamas in 2000 when Bahamian national David
Mitchell was hanged after being convicted for the murders of two German
tourists. Mitchell had an appeal pending
before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights at the time of his execution.
However,
the imposition of the death penalty in The Bahamas is no longer mandatory
following a Judicial Committee of the Privy Council’s decision in a case, which
ruled that judges can exercise discretion and should sentence only “the worst
of the worst” and the “rarest of the rare” to death.
According
to Chenuil-Hazan, breaking away from the “fake solidarity” would lead The
Bahamas to a formal moratorium on the death penalty.
He
suggested that The Bahamas embrace the United Nations General Assembly
Moratorium Resolution and not continuously follow other Caribbean countries by
voting against it.
“The Bahamas should vote,”
Chenuil-Hazan said. “It’s normal. It’s logical.
Dominica should vote in favour, but they don’t just because of this
strange solidarity. You should go beyond
and have your own identity based on your own situation.”
In
a report released by the Advocates for Human Rights, The Greater Caribbean for
Life, and The World Coalition against the Death Penalty, The Bahamas has voted
against every United Nations General Assembly Moratorium Resolution and up
until 2012, The Bahamas also signed the Note Verbale of Dissociation from the
resolution each year.
If
The Bahamas receives a formal moratorium on the death penalty, the country
would be globally recognized as a state with a moratorium on executions.
Amnesty
International identifies countries with formal moratoriums as states or
territories where the death penalty is implemented, but no executions have been
carried out for at least 10 years and which did not oppose the latest United
Nations Resolution for a universal moratorium on executions.
In
addition, Chenuil-Hazan also suggested that the government should begin to
shape the public’s opinion so that Bahamians who are in favour of the death
penalty would understand that the death penalty is not a deterrent to crime.
Using
China as an example, Chenuil-Hazan explained that thousands of Chinese are
executed each year, but there is no decrease in China’s crime rate.
“So when you execute hundreds and
thousands of people every year, you take the risk of becoming a dictatorship
and break the rule of law,” he explained.
“Do you want to be in a democracy with rule of law or in a dictatorship
with hundreds and hundreds of killings?”
The ECPM director added that the
government should have a strong willingness to educate Bahamians so that public
opinion would change and Bahamians would understand that ending the death
penalty is a part of entering a new world that has been embraced by countries
in South America, Europe and Africa.
While abolishing the death penalty
may be complicated for some to understand, applying it increases crime,
according to Chenuil-Hazan.
“Applying the death penalty would
bring violence, state violence,” Chenuil-Hazan said. “The death penalty is a violence, when you
kill someone. It is a violence and it is
a symbolic state violence.”
-30-
For further information contact: Secretary Lindsay Thompson
at (242) 434-5643. Email:thebahamaspressclub@gmail.com.
Website:
www.bahamaspressclub.org
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