Antelope Valley Press

Badinter, who led France to end death penalty, dead

- By ANGELA CHARLTON

PARIS — Robert Badinter, who spearheade­d the drive to abolish France’s death penalty, campaigned against antisemiti­sm and Holocaust denial, and led a European body dealing with the legal fallout of Yugoslavia’s breakup, has died. He was 95.

French President Emmanuel Macron hailed Badinter, a revered human rights defender and former justice minister, as a “figure of the century’’ who “never ceased to advocate for the ideas of the Enlightenm­ent.’’ The French Justice Ministry on Friday confirmed Badinter’s death, without providing details.

A famed lawyer and thinker, Badinter was best known for his sustained push to end capital punishment. He described seeing one of his own clients lose his head to a guillotine, used up until the 1970s to kill criminals in France.

As justice minister under then-President Francois Mitterrand, Badinter overcame public opposition and won parliament­ary support for abolishing the death penalty in 1981.

Born in Paris in 1928 to a Jewish family, Badinter saw Nazi horrors and France’s collaborat­ion up close during World War II, and lost his father in the Sobibor death camp, according to Macron’s office. As a lawyer, he later pursued a notorious Holocaust denier in court.

Badinter went on to lead France’s Constituti­onal Court, served as a senator for 16 years, and was seen as a moral compass for many in France for his defense of human rights.

In 1991, Badinter led an arbitratio­n body set up by the European Economic Community to provide the Peace Conference on Yugoslavia with legal advice after two of the country’s six republics – Slovenia and Croatia – had declared independen­ce. The Badinter Commission, as the body became known, was made up of presidents of constituti­onal courts of the member nations of the EEC, precursor to the EU.

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