The Phnom Penh Post

EU warns Sri Lanka over death penalty

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EU AMBASSADOR­S warned Sri Lanka on Monday against ending its 42-year moratorium on capital punishment and said the island risked losing trade concession­s if it went ahead.

Last week President Maithripal­a Sirisena said repeat drug offenders would be hanged as part of his administra­tion’s new crackdown on narcotics.

“The diplomatic missions have requested the President to maintain the moratorium on the implementa­tion of the death penalty and to uphold Sri Lanka’s tradition of opposition to capital punishment,” the EU ambassador­s said in a joint statement.

The communiqué was supported by their colleagues from Canada and Norway.

Police believe the Indian Ocean island is being used as a transit point by drug trafficker­s. More than a tonne of cocaine seized in recent years was destroyed by police in January.

The main Welikada prison said it was advertisin­g this week for two hangmen to carry out the first execution in 42 years after refurbishi­ng the gallows.

Diplomats said they expected Sirisena to roll back the decision, but should the island go ahead it would loose preferenti­al access for its exports to the 28-member EU bloc.

“If Sri Lanka resumes capital punishment, Colombo will immediatel­y lose the GSP-Plus status,” an EU diplomatic source told AFP.

This refers to its generalise­d system of preference­s (GSP Plus) – a favourable tariff scheme to encourage developing nations to respect human rights – restored by the EU in May 2017 after a seven-year hiatus.

Sri Lanka was denied GSP Plus status in 2010 after failing to meet its rights obligation­s.

The Sirisena administra­tion reapplied after coming to power in 2015.

EU diplomats have estimated that Sri Lanka gains an estimated 300 million euro ($350 million) advantage annually thanks to the GSP-Plus system.

Prison spokesman Thushara Upuldeniya said there were 373 convicts on death row in Sri Lanka, including 18 for serious drug crimes.

Death sentences are still handed down f or crimes including murder, rape and drug-related crimes, but the last execution was in 1976.

Nearly 900 people are currently in prison after been sentenced to death, although many have had their sentences commuted to life or are appealing.

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