Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

VP sets record straight on death penalty

- Lloyd Gumbo in Geneva, Switzerlan­d

THE Government is set to consult Zimbabwean­s on whether the country should retain the death penalty or completely abolish it in fulfilment of recommenda­tions from other United Nations Member-States, Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa has said.

Zimbabwe has 90 inmates on death row. Several countries attending the Universal Periodic Review meeting of the United Nations Human Rights Council Working Group here implored Zimbabwe to scrap capital punishment from its statutes.

They urged Government to immediatel­y suspend the death penalty while it considers completely abolishing it. Vice-President Mnangagwa, who is also in charge of the Ministry of Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs, said the country has not executed anyone on death row in more than a decade.

In an interview with our Harare Bureau, VP Mnangagwa said Government could not unilateral­ly abolish the death penalty without consulting Zimbabwean­s who retained it in the new Constituti­on.

“We have decided that I should make a paper on the issue of the death penalty, which will be made public for the purposes of debate, whether we still need to continue to have the death penalty as part of our statutes or do we need to remove it,” said VP Mnangagwa.

“That is, we are showing that we are not very comfortabl­e with the death penalty. But the issue of the death penalty cannot be an issue of Cabinet alone, we believe that it is an issue where the general public must express itself since it was brought into our statute through the Constituti­on as a result of national consultati­on during the outreach programme.”

VP Mnangagwa said while the new Constituti­on retained the capital punishment, there were major improvemen­ts that deserve credit.

“In the past, anybody above the age of 21 could be sentenced to death if they committed certain crimes like aggravated murder, mutiny or treason. All those things were there. But under the current Constituti­on, that has now been reduced. First, no woman of whatever age can be sentenced to death now. Secondly, no one who is below the age of 18 can be sentenced to death. Then with regard to men, those between the age of 21 and 70 can be sentenced to death for aggravated murder. Those above 70 are immune to be sentenced to death,” said VP Mnangagwa.

VP Mnangagwa told the plenary here that Cabinet approved Presidenti­al clemency on 10 inmates who requested for their death sentences to be commuted to life imprisonme­nt.

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