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Let’s restore death penalty, says Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe | |
(35 minutes later) | |
Zimbabwe’s president, Robert Mugabe, has said he is in favour of resuming executions in the country in response to rising murder rates. | Zimbabwe’s president, Robert Mugabe, has said he is in favour of resuming executions in the country in response to rising murder rates. |
Capital punishment is on the statute book in Zimbabwe, but no one has been executed since 2005, when the country’s last hangman retired. | Capital punishment is on the statute book in Zimbabwe, but no one has been executed since 2005, when the country’s last hangman retired. |
“I think let’s restore the death penalty,” Mugabe said in the capital Harare at the burial of a veteran of Zimbabwe’s independence struggle on Wednesday. | “I think let’s restore the death penalty,” Mugabe said in the capital Harare at the burial of a veteran of Zimbabwe’s independence struggle on Wednesday. |
Although he said his cabinet is divided on the issue, Mugabe said he favoured lifting the moratorium on executions. He did not say when it could happen, but said: “If you hear people are being executed, know Mugabe’s thinking has prevailed.” | |
Mugabe, 93, said he had been shocked by the number of recent murders in Zimbabwe after receiving a crime report from the police chief, though he gave no further details. | Mugabe, 93, said he had been shocked by the number of recent murders in Zimbabwe after receiving a crime report from the police chief, though he gave no further details. |
“People are playing with death by killing each other,” he said. “Is this why we liberated this country? | |
“We want this country to be a peaceful and happy nation, not a country with people who kill each other.” | |
Human rights groups including Amnesty International have often called on Zimbabwe, which has 92 inmates on death row, to permanently abolish capital punishment. | |
The country’s 2013 constitution exempts all women from the death penalty, as well as males under 18 and over 69 years old. | |
Zimbabwe, which has an unemployment rate of more than 90%, announced last month that it received more than 50 applications from people wanting to become hangmen. | |
“The response has been overwhelming and the applications have been from both men and women,” Virginia Mabhiza, permanent secretary in the justice ministry , told the NewsDay newspaper at the time. | |
“We have received over 50 applications in the past few months. People are very interested.” | “We have received over 50 applications in the past few months. People are very interested.” |
A new hangman was reported to have been appointed in 2012 but the chosen candidate was never confirmed. | |
Associated Press and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report | Associated Press and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report |