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Kuwait's Parliament must halt plans to introduce death penalty for b..

Datum nieuwsfeit: 17-04-2012
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Dit is een authentiek persbericht Bron: Amnesty International


 

Kuwait's Parliament must halt plans to introduce death penalty for b..


A proposed legal amendment that would make blasphemy a crime punishable by
death in Kuwait would be a massive step backwards by the country's authorities,
if passed by parliament, Amnesty International said today.

The draft law was quickly introduced and passed by the Kuwaiti Parliament's Law
and Legal Affairs Committee following the arrest of a man accused of insulting
the Prophet Muhammad on Twitter.

Hamad al-Naqi, a member of Kuwait's Shi'a Muslim minority, is being held in
pre-trial detention charged with 'defaming the Prophet' in tweets posted on the
social-networking website last month. He has denied making the posts, saying
that somebody hacked into his Twitter account.

Kuwait's parliament voted in favour of the amendment on 12 April. Before it is
passed, the amendment must go to a second vote two weeks after the first and
then be approved by the government and Kuwait's ruler Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad
al-Sabah.

'We urge Kuwait's parliament to reject such an amendment which would constitute
a flagrant breach of the country's international human rights obligations,'
said Ann Harrison, Deputy Director of Amnesty International's Middle East and
North Africa Programme.

'All eyes are on Kuwait's recently-elected legislators. They must immediately
scrap any plans to introduce the death penalty for blasphemy."

Article 111 of the Penal Code prohibits defamation of religion, currently
providing for up to one year's imprisonment and a fine.

Under international law, 'religious' offences do not fall under the category of
'most serious crimes', the minimum threshold prescribed for crimes carrying the
death penalty.

In November 2011, the United Nations Human Rights Committee called on Kuwait to
'revise its legislation on blasphemy and related laws ['] to ensure their
strict compliance with the [International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, or ICCPR]' to which Kuwait is a state party.

Article 15 of the ICCPR prohibits states from imposing a heavier penalty than
the one applicable at the time an alleged offence was committed.

'If it emerges that Hamad al-Naqi's Twitter account was indeed hacked then he
has no case to answer; otherwise he is being held solely for exercising his
right to freedom of expression and, unless charged with an internationally
recognizable offence, he must be released immediately,' said Ann Harrison.

'On no account should he be sentenced to death.'

Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases without exception,
as a violation of the right to life as recognized in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights and as the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment.


 

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