Tuesday, November 29, 2005
Re the Death Penalty
[A friend sent this. Thought it would be of interest.]
More than 300 cities worldwide will rally against death penalty
Rome, 27 November 2005:
More than 300 cities, including Dallas and Austin from the US state of
Texas, will be taking part in an initiative against the death penalty
called Cities for Life, Cities against the Death Penalty. The
Catholic Community of Sant'Egidio in Rome, organizer of the initiative,
says it will be the largest ever mobilization against capital
punishment.
The Cities for Life, Cities against the Death
Penalty is an initiative staged every year by the Catholic Community of
Sant'Egidio in Rome on 30 November. This year, the fourth edition,
there will be 320 cities in the world taking part, including 30
national capitals. For the event, many of the cities will offer their
main squares and logos dres! sed in a special way, or light up their
symbolic monuments like the Coliseum in Rome, the obelisk in Buenos
Aires.
The
spokesman of the Community of Sant'Egidio, Mario Marazziti, says
special events and shows will bring together city administrators,
ordinary people and students. "Whoever wants to be there will try to
think of how it is possible now to have a higher level of justice,
justice without revenge and a restorative justice than never denies
life," he said.
Mr. Marazziti says the execution of Stanley
Tookie Williams, a double homicide convict who has become an ardent
anti-gang activist on death row, is set for 13 December in California.
Californias governor Schwarzenegger has been urged to stop the
execution from going ahead. In addition the 1,000th execution in the
history of the United States is expected in Virginia around 30 November.
The
worldwide trend, Mr Marazziti said, was against imposing capital
punishment. "We have 115 countries that have abo! lished the death
penalty, we have about 101 countries that are either active
retentionists or passive retentionists, that are de facto abolitionists
but they still have the death penalty," he said. "But just 25-30 years
ago we had the contrary, we had 60 countries that had abolished the
death penalty."
He
says he is convinced the death penalty will disappear one day, as did
slavery in the past. The United States, China, India, Japan and many
Arab countries are among those that impose and carry out capital
punishment.
Special focus is being placed this year on Africa,
which has rapidly moved from being one of the most conservative
continents to the one where changes are occurring fastest. Mr.
Marazziti says that Africa, racked by AIDS, civil conflicts and
poverty, is moving toward abolishing the death penalty. "We had just
one country that had abolished the death penalty in 1981, we have now
13 countries and we have 20 de facto abolitionist countries," he said.
The la! test country to abolish the death penalty in Africa is Senegal.
(Report by Sabina Castelfranco, VOA)
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2005/11/re_the_death_pe.html