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The U.S., China, Iran, Egypt and Saudi Arabia continue to deliver death sentences. Image: Supplied

Home » Death penalty: Which countries put prisoners to death?

Death penalty: Which countries put prisoners to death?

Singapore hanged a prisoner after he was convicted of a drugs offense, the 12th death penalty in the Asian city-state since last year. Singapore hanged a prisoner after he was convicted of a drugs offense, the 12th execution in the Asian city-state since last year. Image: iStock Singapore hanged a prisoner on Wednesday after he […]

13-02-24 20:01
Court
The U.S., China, Iran, Egypt and Saudi Arabia continue to deliver death sentences. Image: Supplied

Singapore hanged a prisoner after he was convicted of a drugs offense, the 12th death penalty in the Asian city-state since last year.

death penalty

Singapore hanged a prisoner after he was convicted of a drugs offense, the 12th execution in the Asian city-state since last year. Image: iStock

Singapore hanged a prisoner on Wednesday after he was convicted of a drugs offense, the 12th execution in the Asian city-state since last year.

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It is one of several dozen countries, including the United States, China, Iran, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, that continue to put prisoners to death.

TREND TOWARD ABOLISHING THE DEATH PENALTY

At least 579 people were put to death in 18 countries in 2021, 96 more than in the previous year, rights group Amnesty International says.

But the uptick followed six years of marked decline in the number of executions.

“Although the global trend remains unmistakably in favour of abolition, the recorded increases in 2021 should act as a warning that it is not yet time to let off the pressure,” Amnesty wrote in a May 2022 report.

Three countries accounted for 80 percent of all reported executions in 2021: Iran, with 314 (up 28 percent), Egypt with 83, and Saudi Arabia with 65 (an increase of 240 percent).

Amnesty’s figures do not include executions in China, believed to be the world’s biggest executioner, as well as North Korea and Vietnam. The three countries keep their data secret.

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DEATH PENALTY ABOLISHED IN 108 COUNTRIES

A total of 108 countries had formally abolished the death penalty for all crimes by the end of 2021, according to Amnesty, up from 16 countries in 1977.

More than two-thirds have abolished it either in law or practice, with Kazakhstan, Malawi, and Sierra Leone the latest nations to introduce a ban.

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UNITED STATES

Executions fell 35 percent in the United States in 2021 to the previous year, with 11 people put to death in six jurisdictions.

It was the lowest number of executions in the country since 1988.

President Joe Biden’s administration imposed a moratorium on all federal executions in July 2021 following a wave of controversial cases under former president Donald Trump.

Virginia became the 23rd state to abolish the death penalty in 2021, the first state from the old Confederate South to do so.

Three other states – California, Oregon, and Pennsylvania – have a moratorium on the death penalty, meaning they do not apply it although it remains on the statute books.

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SAUDI ARABIA

Saudi Arabia put 81 people to death in a single day in March 2022, more than the 69 executed in all of 2021, and a huge leap from 2020 when 27 people were put to death.

IRAN

The 314 people executed in Iran last year was the highest number since 2017 and appears to mainly be people convicted of drug-related offenses, Amnesty said.

EGYPT

Egypt executed 22 percent fewer people in 2021 compared to 2020, with eight women among the 83 people put to death.

DEATH PENALTIES

Amnesty said at least 2,052 death sentences were handed out around the world in 2021, an increase of 39 percent over the previous year, reversing a nearly equivalent drop in 2020 when justice systems were snarled by the Covid-19 pandemic.

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