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Europe

02

Feb

Please help Ashot to stay in the UK PDF Print E-mail
Written by peta ward   

Urgent Action Appeal

Please help Ashot to stay in the UK

39-year-old Ashot Aghababyan from Armenia is currently being held in detention and is due to be forcibly removed from the UK on Sunday 5th February Flight number BD 933 to Yerevan, 15:05 (Home Office Ref: A1435279)

 

Ashot and Lucy at Hexham Car Boot Sale

 

Ashot was an important member of the opposition political party in Armenia and was assistant bodyguard to Albert Bazeyan, one of its leaders and the former Mayor of Yerevan, Armenia’s capital city. Due to his political involvement with the party he was arrested several times and warned about his activities.

 

In 2008, Ashot publicly accused the then President, Robert Kocharyan, of being behind the 1999 attack on the Armenian Parliament that killed the Prime Minister and seven other high-ranking officials. See here, here and here for descriptions of police brutality during the demonstrations, and ill treatment in custody in Armenia, by Human Rights Watch. Following this, his home was raided and he was forced to go into hiding with his wife and child. He was only able to escape from Armenia because relatives and friends paid a large bribe for him to fly out of the country.

 

According to Ashot, “I cannot go back to my own country, Armenia, until the government changes. This is because in 2008 I denounced the current prime minister and his allies as murderers to a crowd of about 10,000 anti-Government demonstrators in Liberty Square through a megaphone. I am the only person to have named them publicly, and to say that I could prove their guilt. As soon as I did this, my life was in danger and I fled the country.

 

Ashot is a man of high principles, great integrity and selflessness. Through his courageous denunciation of a corrupt Government, he has put the interests of his country before his own and he has paid the price, having to leave his country and be separated from his wife and child, for whose safety he also fears.

Last Updated on Thursday, 02 February 2012 13:40
 

09

Oct

The fight for evidence of innocence... PDF Print E-mail
Written by Michela Mancini   

A story of how unexpected important a penfriendship can get...

Arianna Ballotta, one of the founders and the president of the ICADP  since it was founded in 1997, started to write to Richard Wayne Jones in 1992. Richard had been on Texas death row since 1987 for a murder of which he was most probably innocent  and was executed despite compelling evidence of his always proclaimed innocence.

Evidence which unfortunately was never sufficiently considered by any court in the United States. He was convicted largely on the basis of a confession obtained under coercion and duress.

Both the state and federal courts failed to protect his rights for a fair trial by sanctioning the trial court’s use of the coerced confession to convict him. State and federal appeals courts denied the legal challenge to his conviction and the evidence of innocence uncovered after his conviction.

Despite being subjected to police coercion, in violation of his constitutional and international human rights, and irrespective of evidence of his innocence, he was executed by the State of Texas on August 22, 2000

(detailed info can be found here: http://www.lairdcarlson.com/grip/Jones%20Case%20Summary.htm)

.
When she started the correspondence with Richard Jones, Arianna did not know anything at all about the case. As a coherent thinker and activist, Arianna was not interested in knowing if he had or had not committed the crime for which he was sitting on death row.

Opposing the death penalty unconditionally, she chose many years ago to take the side in defense of life, no matter what, which includes having guilty pen-pals among her correspondents.

Last Updated on Sunday, 09 October 2011 22:19
 

03

Oct

The Italian Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty PDF Print E-mail
Written by Arianna Ballotta & Michela Mancini   


The Italian Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (NPO) was founded in Naples in 1997.

 

Coalizione Italiana Contro la Pena di Morte

Our vision : A world where human rights and needs are respected.

Our mission: To educate and raise public awareness of respect of all human beings.

Our motto : Together We Will Win!


The association's goal is to provide news and information to the Italian and International community on human rights, legal and social issues and primarily on the use of capital punishment worldwide. Its founders have proper educational backgrounds and expertise and have been dedicating their time and efforts to the cause for many years.

We pay particular attention to the situation in the United States of America, being the only Western democracy that still applies the death penalty as a means of punishment.

Our opposition to the death penalty is unconditional, as we are convinced that the respect of human rights be an unquestionable top priority and that justice cannot be pursued by taking revenge, but by conducting the forces operating in society in a just and well-balanced way.



Each community must be in a position to assure its members certainty of punishment and above all equitable and rightful legal proceedings, but it also has to enable offenders to rehabilitate themselves – whenever possible – thus balancing the legitimate need for justice for the families of the victims of violent crime, and the respect of the very same values which demand an act of justice. The imposition of the death penalty negates modern concepts of penology which are based on the theory that rehabilitation of the individual criminal is possible.



We are in direct contact with several men and women sitting on death in the USA as well as in other countries.



Our educational activities are being held mainly in schools and universities, religious and lay associations, and within groups / organizations that work in defense of human rights. As our target audience is mainly composed of young people, we mostly use the Internet as a way of communication.

Last Updated on Sunday, 09 October 2011 21:32
 

02

Oct

Anti-Roma Demonstrations Spread Across Bulgaria PDF Print E-mail
Written by Matthew Brunwasser   

 

Anti-Roma Demonstrations Spread Across Bulgaria

SOFIA — Anti-Gypsy demonstrations that began during the weekend continued to spread across Bulgaria on Tuesday evening in response to the killing of a man by a minibus whose driver is linked to a man accused of being a Roma crime boss.

Prime Minister Boyko M. Borisov and his main political rival, President Georgi S. Parvanov, made a show of bipartisan unity Monday in visiting Katunitsa, the village where the killing happened on Friday. Protesters had burned houses and cars belonging to the family of the supposed crime boss, Kiril Rashkov, while demanding that the authorities “deport” the family from the village, which has a population of 2,300.

“Ethnic peace is the only way to guarantee Bulgaria’s prosperity,” Mr. Borisov told a meeting of government ministers on Tuesday. “Every other action guarantees the failure of the country and falling into deep isolation.”

The news media referred to the protests as “pogroms.” The protesters shouted racist slogans like “Gypsies into soap” and “Turks under the knife.”

The police guarded entrances to Roma neighborhoods across the country as demonstrators announced protests on Tuesday evening in 20 cities, including Sofia, the capital. Roma men are reported to have taken up clubs and axes in response to rumors of invasions by skinheads.

The chief national prosecutor, Boris Velchev, sent orders to local prosecutors on Tuesday telling them to “immediately” arrest and investigate those “inciting ethnic hatreds,” a criminal offense in Bulgaria punishable by up to six years in prison and fines up to €15,000, or $20,000.

“The institutions are standing together firm in their opposition to such radical and extreme feelings,” Mr. Parvanov said Monday. On Tuesday, he called a special meeting of the Consultative Council for National Security for Saturday to address the threats caused by the rising ethnic tensions.

The demonstrations began after word spread that Angel Petrov, 19, had been run over by a minibus driven by a relative of Mr. Rashkov’s while walking his dog, Atanas Petrov, his father, said on the television station BTV.

Over 125 people were arrested during the weekend, 28 of whom were charged with hooliganism, after soccer fans joined the local protesters. Hundreds of nationalists rode their motorcycles to Katunitsa on Sunday to show their support. About 100 other people were arrested on Monday around the country.

In the Communist era, Mr. Rashkov, 69, was convicted several times of offenses involving illegal foreign exchange and gold transactions. In 1998, he founded a Roma political party.

Mr. Borisov has emphasized that the death in Katunitsa is a criminal problem, not an ethnic one. He promised that the authorities were investigating Mr. Rashkov and the origin of his wealth and that results could be expected soon.

Bulgaria has faced years of heavy criticism from the European Union for failing to reform its ineffective judicial system and for not prosecuting any high-level organized-crime figures or corrupt government officials.

Every town in Bulgaria has local crime bosses, be they Roma or ethnic Bulgarian, said Krasimir Kunev, president of the Bulgarian Helsinki Committee, a human rights organization in Sofia. The government has consistently failed to prosecute them, he said.

“These incidents have deep roots in Bulgaria’s post-Communist transition,” he said.

Mr. Kunev said the police reacted slowly at the beginning of the protest, encouraging the proliferation of ethnic hatred. He said there was no reason to think that anti-Roma feelings were especially high at the moment. “It has always been very high,” Mr. Kunev said.

“In such an atmosphere, there should be no surprise that you have so many young people marching on the streets, shouting racist slogans and destroying property,” Mr. Kunev said. But he said that later actions by law enforcement officials had been sufficient.

The government said there was no delay in its response. “The actions of the Interior Ministry have been on time, adequate and fully corresponded to the situation,” said a spokeswoman, Vania Valkova.

Andrei Raichev, a political analyst at Gallup International in Sofia, said the passions stemmed from three qualities attributed to Mr. Rashkov: criminality, extreme wealth and Roma ethnicity. These, he said, are the “three kinds of hatred here.”

“I can’t ever remember such a case of mass aggression against Roma,” he said.

 

01

Oct

Catholics must no longer support capital punishment PDF Print E-mail
Written by Source: National Catholic Reporter   


VATICAN CITY:

Dead wrong: Catholics must no longer support capital punishment


The Catholic Church's position on capital punishment has evolved considerably over the centuries.

And as a result, "it is not a message that is immediately understood -- that there is no room for supporting the death penalty in today's world," said a Vatican's expert on capital punishment and arms control.

Because the church has only in the past few decades begun closing the window -- if not shutting it completely -- on the permissibility of the death penalty, people who give just a partial reading of the church's teachings may still think the death penalty is acceptable today, said Tommaso Di Ruzza, desk officer at the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace.

St. Thomas Aquinas equated a dangerous criminal to an infected limb thereby making it "praiseworthy and healthful" to kill the criminal in order to spare the spread of infection and safeguard the common good.

However, over the centuries, justice has evolved from being the smiting arm of revenge toward a striving for reform and restoration, much like today's medical science, where amputation is no longer the only recourse for curing an infection.

Modern-day popes have reflected that change in attitude.

As far back as the 19th and early 20th centuries theologians pondered the seeming paradox between the Fifth Commandment, "You shall not kill," and the church's dark history of condoning state-held executions to deal with heresy and other threats and crimes.

Catholic fashion with a conscience

Pope Paul VI took concrete action in distancing the church from this form of punishment, first by formally banning the use of the death penalty in Vatican City State, although no one had been executed under the authority of the Vatican's temporal governance since 1870.

Pope Paul also spoke publicly against planned executions and called for clemency for death-row inmates. Pope John Paul II also would punctuate his Angelus and general audience talks with impassioned appeals to spare the life of a prisoner on the verge of execution.

It was the Polish pope who "earnestly hoped and prayed" for a global moratorium on the use of capital punishment and the abolition of the death penalty worldwide.

Pope Benedict, too, continues to send appeals for clemency in high-profile cases via telegrams either through a country's bishops or nuncio, and he has praised a U.N. resolution calling upon states to institute a moratorium on the use of the death penalty.

The 1992 Catechism of the Catholic Church recognized "as well-founded the right and duty of legitimate public authority to punish malefactors by means of penalties commensurate with the gravity of the crime, not excluding, in cases of extreme gravity, the death penalty." At the same time, it said, "bloodless means" that could protect human life should be used when possible.

The "extreme gravity" loophole was tightened with changes made in 1997, which reflected the pope's 1995 encyclical, "Evangelium Vitae." It specifies that the use of the death penalty is allowed only when the identity and responsibility of the condemned is certain and if capital punishment "is the only possible way of effectively defending human lives against the unjust aggressor."

However, given the resources and possibilities available to governments today for restraining criminals, "cases of the absolute necessity of the suppression of the offender 'are very rare, if not practically nonexistent,'" it says.

Pope Benedict, then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, had a major role in drafting the 1992 Catechism and, especially, its 1997 revised passages. When he told journalists about the changes in 1997, he said while the principles do not absolutely exclude capital punishment, they do give "very severe or limited criteria for its moral use."

"It seems to me it would be very difficult to meet the conditions today," he had said.

When a journalist said the majority of Catholics in the United States favor use of the death penalty, Cardinal Ratzinger said, "While it is important to know the thoughts of the faithful, doctrine is not made according to statistics, but according to objective criteria taking into account progress made in the church's thought on the issue."

Di Ruzza said the divergence of many Catholics in the United States from the church's current position is a sign that "the universal church must also accompany the particular churches a little bit" and help guide them on this "journey of purification," which is more a process of "maturity rather than a revolution or change in tradition."

Without reading Popes John Paul and Benedict's clear condemnations of the death penalty, the catechism will "unfortunately have the risk of being ambiguous or taken out of context," he said.

The church upholds the inherent dignity of all human beings, even the most sin-filled, and believes in hope, conversion and mercy, he said.

There is always room for conversion, he said, and forgiveness does not mean being naive about the real evil the human being is capable of committing.

The death penalty does not solve much; a victim still feels loss and crime is not deterred, he said.

Communities must strive to promote the common good, and it's dubious "that you can kill someone for the good of all," he said.

"The beauty of forgiveness must also be truly discovered; it's this that saves us," said Di Ruzza.

Otherwise, "by killing the just or the unjust without understanding that they have dignity, we will find ourselves after 2,000 years in the same courtyard shouting, 'Kill him!,' like they did with Jesus."

"God forgave us. He did not call us to death. Jesus let us overcome death" so as to more fully embrace life, he said.

(source: National Catholic Reporter)

 


 

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