“An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind,” said Gandhi.
The death penalty is unjust and inhuman. Its continued use is a
stain on a society built on humanitarian values, and it should be abolished
immediately.
Many think that there could be nothing wrong with the death
penalty as the Indian Constitution allows for capital punishment, which means
that the founding fathers of this country must have also fully approved of it.
In reality, several members of the Constituent Assembly were firmly opposed to
the death penalty.
The Architect of the Constitution, Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar,
admitted in the Constituent Assembly that people may not follow non-violence in
practice but “they certainly adhere to the principle of non-violence as a moral
mandate which they ought to observe as far as they possibly can.” With this in
mind, he said, “the proper thing for this country to do is to abolish the death
sentence altogether.”
On June 3, 1949, Professor Shibbanlal Saxena, a freedom fighter
who had been on death row for his involvement in the Quit India Movement, spoke
in the Constituent Assembly of how he had seen innocent people being hanged for
murder during his days in prison. Proposing the abolition of the death penalty,
he said that the avenue of appealing to the Supreme Court “will be open to
people who are wealthy, who can move heaven and earth, but the common people
who have no money and who are poor will not be able to avail themselves” of it.
Miscarriage of justice is, in fact, one of the biggest concerns
about the death penalty. Is it possible that someone could be wrongly hanged in
21st century India? The answer, unfortunately, is yes. Studies conducted by
Amnesty International and the People’s Union for Civil Liberties have shown
that the process of deciding who should be on death row is arbitrary and
biased. The Supreme Court has itself admitted on several occasions that there
is confusion and contradiction in the application of the death penalty.
INSTANCES
OF INNOCENCE
Last year, 14 eminent retired judges wrote to the President,
pointing out that the Supreme Court had erroneously given the death penalty to
15 people since 1996, of whom two were hanged. The judges called this “the gravest known miscarriage of justice in the history of crime
and punishment in independent India.”
Some argue that the death penalty is the only way to deter
heinous crime, especially violence against women and children. But a
comprehensive study done last year in the United States found that there is no
credible evidence that the death penalty has any deterrent effect on crime.
The “Innocence Project” in the United States [a national
litigation and public policy organisation dedicated to exonerating wrongfully
convicted individuals through DNA testing and reforming the criminal justice
system has found, on the other hand, several cases where innocent people were
given the death sentence. One such case is that of Cameron Todd Willingham, who
was executed in 2004 for the deaths of his three young daughters. In 2009,
reinvestigation of the case raised serious doubts in the appreciation of
forensic evidence in the case and the judge concluded that Willingham was
wrongfully convicted. Another case is that of Carlos DeLuna who was executed in
1989 for the murder of a young woman some years before. In 2004, a study by Columbia Law School
students brought to light the wrongful conviction of Carlos DeLuna, which
turned out to be a case of mistaken identity of the actual perpetrator of the
murder. Lawmakers in India find it convenient to hold up the death penalty as a
symbol of their resolve to tackle crime, and choose to ignore more difficult
but more effective solutions like social education and police or judicial
reform. The certainty of punishment, not severity, is the real deterrent.
RAJIV
GANDHI CASE
The death penalty is little more than judicially sanctioned
murder. Justice K.T. Thomas, who headed the three member bench in the Rajiv
Gandhi assassination case, has said that executing Perarivalan, Murugan and
Santhan, convicted and sentenced to death in the case, would amount to punishing them twice for the same offence, as
they had already spent 22 years in jail, the equivalent of life imprisonment.
In recent months, the Government of India has shown an alarming
tendency to implement the death penalty. It is a fallacy to think that one
killing can be avenged with another. For, capital punishment is merely revenge
masquerading as justice. When the government is trying to create a just society
where there is less violence and murder, it cannot be allowed to commit the
same crime against its citizens in the name of justice.
The DMK president, Kalaignar Karunanidhi, reiterated the party’s
stand last month when he called upon the Government
of India to commute the death sentences of the 16 men, including seven
from Tamil Nadu, who are on death row. The DMK president had made similar pleas
to the Centre in August 2011 and October 2006. This has been the party’s
consistent position against this inhumane practice.
REST
OF THE WORLD
The world is moving away from using the death penalty. The
European Union has made “abolition of death
penalty” a prerequisite for
membership. The 65th United Nations
General Assembly voted in December
2010, for the third time, in favour of abolishing the death penalty and
called for a global moratorium on executions. Amnesty International reports
that 140 countries — more than two-thirds of the world — do not use the death
penalty any more. India needs to recognise this global trend, and act in step
with it.
( Kanimozhi is a Member
of Parliament )
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