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Burkina wants to reinstate death penalty: government source

By AFP
09 November 2024   |   9:34 pm
Burkina Faso's military regime wants to reinstate the death penalty after the West African country abolished it in 2018, a government source told AFP on Saturday. The latest execution in Burkina Faso was in 1988, according to Amnesty International. Reintroducing capital punishment to the penal code "is being considered. It's up to the government to…
(FILES) In this file photo taken on October 15, 2022 Capitaine Ibrahim Traore, Burkina Faso’s new president, attends the ceremony for the 35th anniversary of Thomas Sankara’s assassination, in Ouagadougou. – Burkina Faso’s military ruler denied on February 3, 2023 that mercenaries from Russia’s Wagner Group were active in his country even as Ouagadougou has been courted by Moscow. (Photo by OLYMPIA DE MAISMONT / AFP)

Burkina Faso’s military regime wants to reinstate the death penalty after the West African country abolished it in 2018, a government source told AFP on Saturday.

The latest execution in Burkina Faso was in 1988, according to Amnesty International.

Reintroducing capital punishment to the penal code “is being considered. It’s up to the government to discuss it, then make the proposal to the Transitional Legislative Assembly (ALT) for adoption,” the source said, adding that the date had not been chosen.

Justice Minister Rodrigue Bayala said on Friday, after parliament passed a bill introducing community service, that “the issue of death penalty, which is being discussed, will be implemented in the draft criminal code”.

Bayala also said there could be further amendments to the criminal code, “to follow the vision and the guidelines given by the head of state, Captain Ibrahim Traore”, who seized power in a September 2022 coup.

The Burkinabe government in July passed a bill that included plans to ban homosexuality.

Amnesty International has reported a surge in the use of the death penalty on the African continent, saying in a statement in October that “recorded executions more than tripled and recorded death sentences increased significantly by 66 percent”.

On the other hand, the rights group noted that “24 countries across Sub-Saharan Africa have abolished the death penalty for all crimes while two additional countries have abolished it for ordinary crimes only”.

“Kenya and Zimbabwe currently have bills tabled to abolish the death penalty for all crimes, while Gambia… has commenced a constitutional amendment process that will… effectively abolish the death penalty,” it said.

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