(Credit: Pixabay)
YAOUNDÈ, Cameroon – An Italian missionary working in the Central African Republic (CAR) has welcomed the end to capital punishment in the impoverished country.
The country’s National Assembly unanimously to abolish the death penalty on May 27. The new law also makes torture illegal.
Father Aurelio Gazzera, an Italian Carmelite missionary who has been working in the CAR since 1971, praised the new law, although he remains uncomfortable with the fact that laws are often not respected in the war-ravaged country.
“The news of the Abolition of the Death Penalty Act is very good news. It is true that since 1982 – 41 years ago – there have been no more executions. But it is still good news,” he told Crux.
However, the priest noted that less formal means of eliminating people could still be a problem in a country where any regime that comes into power can still “threaten, arrest, and sometimes eliminate opponents or people who ‘disturb’.”
In 2013, a Muslim rebel group called Seleka took over the government of the country, giving rise to the pro-Christian anti-Balaka militia movement. Eventually, Seleka was driven out, but tit-for-tat violence between the two groups continues to this day, and the central government has until recently had trouble exercising power outside of the capital Bangui.
“In the last two years, the country has experienced a ‘state of emergency’ which has sometimes allowed the military and the police to arrest, threaten or punish people o, without much regard for legal limits. And the curfew, introduced in January 2021, is still maintained,” he said.
The vote CAR adds to the growing number of countries in Africa abolishing capital punishment. Chad abolished in in 2020 and Sierra Leon did the same in 2021.The CAR has become the 24th African country and the 109th country in the world to abolish the death penalty.
In Zambia, President Hakainde Hichilema has asked the parliament to “consider removing the death penalty from the laws of Zambia,” in a move welcomed by Amnesty International, which also praised the Zambian leader for commuting the sentences of 30 prisoners on death row.
However, several African countries continue to issue death sentences, including Egypt, Botswana, Somalia, Sudan and South Sudan.
In 2014, Cameroon upheld the death penalty especially for terrorism-related offenses, although the country observes a moratorium on the carrying out of actual executions.
“The death penalty is a cruel and inhuman punishment that never proved to be efficient in the objectives it pursues and our commitment to its universal abolishment makes us shocked each time it is used,” said Corentin Mançois, the Death Penalty Program Officer for FIACAT, and international federation of Christian organizations opposed to torture and capital punishment.
However, capital punishment still has much popular support, even in countries where it is abolished.
Jeane Ndongo, a CAR refugee who fled to Cameroon, said that the new law stops true justice from being done in a country where ethno-religious violence has nearly torn the country apart.
“What I fear the most is that in the absence of a law that should at least act as a deterrent, rebels and perhaps soldiers will continue to kill,” she told Crux.
“My father and elder brother were killed, and it may be frustrating to know that their killers may never find justice,” she added, noting that the abolition of the death penalty could offer them a sense of freedom from prosecution.
Gazzera said most victims of the CAR civil war are less interested in executing their persecutors, but instead want to see more commitment to justice from public authorities.
“Rather than invoking the death penalty, the population would like a serious commitment. Despite the fact that the president, ministers and authorities often call for an ‘end to impunity’, it is still normal to see an ex-war criminal in office as a minister or as an advisor, with impunity. The SPC [Special Criminal Court] managed to arrest Minister Hassan Bouba, but he was released by the gendarmerie and the presidential guard. And to top it all off, a few days later he was decorated publicly and officially on National Day.”
Bouba, the minister for livestock, was a former rebel leader who was arrested last year for “war crimes and crimes against humanity.” His supporters said that he was instrumental in disarming rebel groups and acting as a mediator in the war-torn country, and his arrest was politically motivated.
Newer articles:
- UK Home Office accused of attempting to deport unaccompanied minors to Rwanda - 05/06/2022 02:17
- Swiss Firm Fined Billion Dollar for Massive Bribery in Africa - 04/06/2022 04:18
- South Sudan coach calls for his side to be aggressive to compete - 03/06/2022 03:18
- Juba City residents decry sudden surge in commodity prices - 03/06/2022 02:17
- Our Abductors Were Fulani From Sudan, Mali; They Are Likely Behind Beheading Of People In South-East – Methodist Prelate, Kanu-Uche - 02/06/2022 12:17
Older news items
- Sheep sentenced to three years for killing old woman in South Sudan! - 02/06/2022 02:38
- Darfur village left reeling from Wagner Group's CAR massacre - 02/06/2022 02:29
- Execution-Style Killings Emblematic of Impunity by South Sudan Army - 01/06/2022 14:20
- South Sudanese Businessman's Daughter Marries Lavish Wedding, Helicopter Drops Rose Petals - 01/06/2022 13:16
- Africa home to all of world's top 10 neglected crises - 01/06/2022 06:41
Latest news items (all categories):
- How Collo’s Selfish Education Negatively Affects Society - 17/05/2025 21:06
- Museveni Launches Regional Road Project Linking Uganda, South Sudan & Central African Republic - 17/05/2025 20:08
- AMECEA And SSSCBC Host Three-Day Constitution Review Workshop in South Sudan - 17/05/2025 20:03
- ‘Knives Are Out’ in South Sudan as Vice President Is Held in Detention - 17/05/2025 19:09
- UN Security Council Should Renew South Sudan Arms Embargo - 17/05/2025 19:03
Random articles (all categories):
- IOM - Special Vacancy Notice SVN2022-33 Project Assistant - Protection, Gender Equality and Inclusion (Bentiu) - 04/08/2022 21:39
- What can a South Sudan brewery teach us about business in conflict zones? - 31/08/2015 03:16
- South Sudan president complains of being treated like 'schoolboy' - 18/09/2015 13:43
- South Sudan unveils first Kidney hospital - 21/10/2017 23:13
- Hunger, displacement spiralling out of control in Sudan: UN - 03/08/2023 03:44
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 104204 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 22658 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 22106 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 21083 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 19559 times