The Citizen (Gauteng)

Many applicants for hangman’s job

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– At least 50 people want to become Zimbabwe’s hangman, a job that fell vacant over a decade ago, officials said yesterday, stressing that applicants were “very interested” in the role.

The country, which has an unemployme­nt rate of more than 90% by some measures, last executed a prisoner in 2005, after which the serving hangman retired.

“The response has been overwhelmi­ng and the applicatio­ns have been from both men and women,” justice ministry secretary Virginia Mabhiza told the NewsDay newspaper.

“We have received over 50 applicatio­ns in the past few months. People are very interested.”

After a long search, a new hangman was reported to have been appointed in 2012 but the chosen candidate was never confirmed.

Rights groups including Amnesty Internatio­nal have often called on Zimbabwe, which has 92 inmates on death row, to abolish capital punishment.

Zimbabwe’s new 2013 constituti­on exempts women from the hangman’s noose.

“All men between 18 and 69 years who have been convicted of murder in aggravated circumstan­ces can receive capital punishment,” Mabhiza was quoted as saying.

She did not say when the hangman would be appointed or if Zimbabwe intended to revive executions soon.

Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was justice minister until a recent Cabinet reshuffle, is a strong opponent of the death penalty. –

Harare

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