By Amir Zia
Monthly Newsline
January 2015
Capital punishment must not be seen, or come into force, as a mere reaction and act of vengeance for the Peshawar tragedy. It should be part and parcel of a well thought out strategy to combat all heinous crimes and terrorism, towards which the two successive governments have so far shown criminal negligence. There is no doubt that the death penalty is not to be taken lightly, but the question comes down to whether the state is ready to stand by the victims and their families or is it skewed in favour of the criminals and terrorists. The choice could never be clearer
The December 16 massacre of schoolchildren at the Army Public
School in Peshawar finally forced the government to partially lift the
moratorium on the death penalty. Imposed by the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)
government in 2008, the moratorium gave relief to convicts involved in heinous
crimes such as terrorism, murder, child abuse, kidnapping for ransom and drug
peddling.
The Sharif government’s decision to scrap the ban on the hanging
of convicts involved in terrorism came more as a knee-jerk reaction to ward off
the intense public grief and anger over the barbarity in Peshawar, rather than
a well thought out strategy aimed at removing the dichotomy in the country’s
legal system that allows courts to hand down death sentences on 27 different
counts, but the executive arm of the state to block their implementation in an
open breach of the Constitution.
Although this partial lifting of the ban on the death penalty
remains a small welcome step in the right direction, it has failed to address
the fundamental contradiction in which the executive still appears reluctant to
uphold the Constitution and facilitate the dispensation of justice as required
by the law of the land. By continuing with the moratorium on the death penalty
– on cases other than terror convictions – the government has again benefited
the criminals at the cost of the victims and their families.
We still see a small minority, comprising mainly so-called
liberals and human rights activists, campaigning against the execution of
terrorists and challenging the very concept of capital punishment, without
taking into account the objective conditions of Pakistan where terrorism, crime
and lawlessness remain endemic.
They cite examples of the European Union and scores of other
countries which have abolished the capital punishment. However, they fail to
mention that none of these countries have witnessed nearly 60,000 people,
including thousands of soldiers and officers, martyred in relentless terror
attacks since 2002, when the Pakistani security establishment abandoned its
support for the Afghan Taliban and tried to clamp down on non-state actors
using our country to foment violence and terrorism both here and abroad.
These campaigners also ignore religiously-motivated targeted
killings, and the soaring crime rate including murders, kidnapping for
ransom and child-abuse cases in their zeal to take a ‘politically correct’
position favoured by their donors and the European Union, which is once again
pressing Pakistan to halt the execution of terrorists.
They also discount the fact that those countries which have
abolished the death penalty remain far ahead of Pakistan in terms of
socio-economic development and education. None of them face the kind of
internal existential security challenges, instability and turmoil that Pakistan
is confronted with, where the writ of the state remains weak and its legitimacy
is challenged by various militant extremist and nationalist groups.
Yet, this small section of anti-death penalty campaigners manage
to confuse the issue – thanks to their dominance in the English-language press
where a handful of writers, journalists and lawyers connected with various NGOs
keep pushing an agenda that stands in stark contrast to Pakistan’s reality. In
doing this, they are either demonstrating blatant intellectual dishonesty or
their ignorance and lack of understanding. But despite their well-oiled
propaganda machine both in the traditional and the new media, these rights
groups form only a tiny part of the larger problem that stems mainly from the
conduct, lack of vision and flawed policies of the two successive civilian
governments regarding this vital issue.
If the former PPP and the present Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz
(PML-N) governments were sincere in their intent to abolish the death penalty,
they should have amended the Constitution. However, they could not take this
path mainly because of three factors: fear of a backlash from the country’s
religious forces which see any such step as violating the tenets of Islam;
opposition from the country’s top judges in the high courts, Supreme Court and
the security establishment; and the overwhelming public support for capital
punishment in our society. Therefore, these two successive governments took the
easy course of banning executions through an executive order that created legal
and constitutional complications.
In Pakistan’s context, capital punishment can play a vital role
in acting as a deterrent to crime and terrorism and send a strong message that
the state stands committed to justice. This would be the first step in
combating the twin ghosts of terrorism and extremism. Here, no sane mind is
denying the importance and need of mid-to long-term policies aimed at
socio-economic development, the creation of more employment opportunities and reforms
in the education system, particularly seminaries. But the short-term measures
of quickly bringing perpetrators of atrocious crimes and terrorism to justice
remain as important as long-term policies.
Many critics of capital punishment point to flaws in the
country’s policing, prosecution and judicial system which, in their view, can
result in the hanging of an innocent. But this criticism holds little ground
given the fact that our courts, especially the superior courts, remain
extra-vigilant in handing down the death sentence. The main complaint of the
law enforcement agencies is that our judicial system acquits many of the
hardened criminals and terrorists rather than convicts them. Our legal system
allows multiple appeals at every stage of the trial and when it comes to
handing down the death sentence, our honourable judges have a tradition of
showing restraint.
Nevertheless, reforms in the judicial system remain the need of
the hour. Currently, most cases drag on from grandfather to grandson. This delay
in the dispensation of justice is the greatest injustice. The government needs
to provide more resources to increase the number of judges at every level. It
should also take steps to provide security to judges, prosecutors and
witnesses, especially in terrorism-related cases.
There also remains a need for necessary changes in the laws to
set up special courts for the speedy trial of terrorists. The government,
opposition parties, religious scholars and clerics, as well as the leaders of
public opinion, must not allow the European Union to dictate terms or criminal
rights campaigners to dilute or confuse the issue. Pakistan is at war. Steps
need to be taken on a war-footing to defeat the enemy within. There is no
room for wavering. The terrorists must be confronted with the resolute might of
the state and the law.
Additionally, the government must review the Qisas and Diyat
laws which are grossly misused by the rich and powerful to extract pardons from
the families of the victims in routine murder cases and even in the so-called
honour killings. To begin with, the state should be the aggrieved party in all
the honour killing cases and must ensure that any man, who ordered the killing
of his daughter, wife, mother or sister, is not allowed to pardon any blood
relation who executed the murder.
Capital punishment must not be seen, or come into force, as a
mere reaction and act of vengeance for the Peshawar tragedy. It should be part
and parcel of a well thought out strategy to combat all heinous crimes and terrorism,
towards which the two successive governments have so far shown criminal
negligence. There is no doubt that the death penalty is not to be taken
lightly, but the question comes down to whether the state is ready to stand by
the victims and their families or is it skewed in favour of the criminals and
terrorists. The choice could never be clearer.
By Amir Zia
Monthly Newsline
January 2015
The December 16 massacre of schoolchildren at the Army Public
School in Peshawar finally forced the government to partially lift the
moratorium on the death penalty. Imposed by the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)
government in 2008, the moratorium gave relief to convicts involved in heinous
crimes such as terrorism, murder, child abuse, kidnapping for ransom and drug
peddling.
No comments:
Post a Comment