BFF-30 Sri Lanka faces legal challenges in bid to resume hangings

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ZCZC

BFF-30

SRILANKA-DRUGS-CRIME

Sri Lanka faces legal challenges in bid to resume hangings

COLOMBO, June 30, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Sri Lanka’s president is facing fresh
legal challenges in his attempt to end a 43-year moratorium on capital
punishment and start executing drug convicts, officials said Sunday.

Two petitions were filed in the Court of Appeal Friday seeking an order
quashing any move by Maithripala Sirisena to resume executions, which have
not been carried out since the last hanging in June 1976.

“The Court of Appeal will have a preliminary hearing next week. In the
meantime, the prisons commissioner has given an assurance to court that there
will be no hangings,” a court official told AFP.

On Wednesday, Sirisena said he has completed formalities to resume hangings
by signing the death warrants of four condemned drug convicts. He did not say
when the executions would be carried out.

Justice ministry sources said they were yet to fill the vacancies for two
hangmen, although more than a dozen candidates had been shortlisted for the
job.

Although the last execution was more than four decades ago, an executioner
was in post until his retirement in 2014. Three replacements since have quit
after short stints at the unused gallows.

There has been a mounting chorus of international criticism of Sirisena’s
announcement.

Justice ministry sources said, however, there would have to be a lengthy
administrative process before an execution took place.

A High Court judge who condemned a convict would have to make a fresh
recommendation whether to carry out the death penalty or not. The condemned
prisoner also has the option of making a clemency plea to the president.

“I have signed the death warrants of four,” Sirisena told reporters at his
official residence on Wednesday.

“They have not been told yet. We don’t want to announce the names yet
because that could lead to unrest in prisons.”

An official in Sirisena’s office said the president wanted the hangings to
send a powerful message to the illegal drugs trade.

Sirisena said there were 200,000 drug addicts in the country, and 60
percent of the 24,000 prison population were drug offenders.

Criminals in Sri Lanka are regularly handed death sentences for murder,
rape and drug-related crimes, but since 1976 their punishments have been
commuted to life imprisonment.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 1250 hrs