The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Govt pushes to abolish death penalty

- Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter

GOVERNMENT intends to abolish the death penalty, with plans already afoot to push for debate on Constituti­onal amendments to end death by hanging in line with internatio­nal trends to do away with capital punishment, a Cabinet minister has said.

Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi said President Mnangagwa wants the death penalty banned.

He said Zimbabwe had streamline­d categories of people liable for the death penalty to underscore its resentment of capital punishment.

Minister Ziyambi said this on Monday while giving oral evidence before a Senate thematic committee which wanted to be updated on the human rights situation in the country.

Committee chairperso­n Senator Oliver Chidawu (ZANU-PF) asked Minister Ziyambi how far Government had gone towards abolishing the death penalty.

Minister Ziyambi said Zimbabwe had not executed convicts on death row since 2005.

“From 2005 we have had no execution. The 2013 Constituti­on was an improvemen­t from the previous one in that women can no longer be sentenced to death; those under the age of 21 are no longer sentenced to death, those over 70 are spared the death penalty,” said Minister Ziyambi.

“Only males over 21 and below 70 can be sentenced to death, which we believe is a great improvemen­t from the previous position that we had. The status quo was as a result of the consultati­on that was done through Constituti­onal Parliament­ary Committee (Copac). There was a vote that let us leave it there for now and this was captured in the Constituti­on,” he said.

“The President is desirous that we remove it but that will also entail us amending the Constituti­on to ensure that is taken care of. But over and above that, I think we have

done a lot to ensure that we respect the right to life. We have not been executing (convicts) and we have limited the category of people who can be sentenced to death,” he said.

Minister Ziyambi said through debate in Parliament legislator­s should decide whether to remove the death penalty or not.

“I believe we are moving in line with what other countries are doing. Today (Monday) at the United Nations there is going to be a vote on a moratorium on the death penalty. Countries are voting to say even those on the death row can you give them a moratorium.

“You will agree that even when His Excellency was inaugurate­d in November, one of the first things he did was to commute part of death penalty (verdicts) to life sentence,” said Minister Ziyambi.

 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa presents the findings of the Kgalema Motlanthe-chaired Commission of Inquiry into the August 1 post-election violence at his Munhumutap­a Offices in Harare yesterday. — (Picture by Tawanda Mudimu)
President Mnangagwa presents the findings of the Kgalema Motlanthe-chaired Commission of Inquiry into the August 1 post-election violence at his Munhumutap­a Offices in Harare yesterday. — (Picture by Tawanda Mudimu)

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