Dear All
The death penalty was abolished in Great Britain in 1965;
the last hanging took place in for murder took place in 1964. The Act to
abolish the death penalty was introduced to Parliament as a private member's
bill by Sydney Silverman MP. This was an important bill; it signalled that
Britain had moved on.
I oppose the death penalty, but by the same token, I respect
the fact that other countries must be allowed to have their own rule of law.
One of the issues which I have talked about in the past was young Muslims who
effectively went on murder holidays to join groups such as Isis. These people
because they spoke English became online internet murderers who enjoyed
murdering people by beheading victims.
One group of killers were called "The Beatles",
dubbed as such by their hostages because of their English accents, Its
members were nicknamed "John", "Paul",
"George", and "Ringo" by their hostages. Jihadi John was
probably the best well known of the murderers until he was killed. Justice
caught up with Jihadi John when he was killed in a drone strike. His military
service with his terror group lasted two years, in that time he murdered
several people.
Here is his wiki,
Jihadi John wasn’t a soldier, just a recreational killer.
Two of the other members of the “Beatles” Alexanda Kotey and
El Shafee Elsheikh have been captured, the US wants these two for extradition
to the US, and they have been rightfully stripped of their British citizenship.
They were captured in January this year, and then a row what to do with them has
broken out.
The UK doesn’t want them returned to British soil, and if
they go to the US, they will probably face the death penalty. Interestingly,
the new Home Secretary Sajid Javid has been accused of abandoning Britain’s
long-held opposition to the death penalty in negotiations with the US about the
two terror suspects. The Home Sec has told US Attorney General Jeff Sessions
that the UK will not demand a “death penalty assurance” as part of the
extradition of Alexanda Kotey and El Shafee Elsheikh.
The UK “does not currently intend to request, nor actively
encourage”, the transfer of Kotey and Elsheikh to Britain said the Home Sec.
He added:
“All assistance and material will be provided on the
condition that it may only be used for the purpose sought in that request,
namely a federal criminal investigation or prosecution. “Furthermore, I am of
the view that there are strong reasons for not requiring a death penalty
assurance in this specific case, so no such assurances will be sought.”
Amnesty International accused the UK government of
abandoning its blanket opposition to the death penalty, describing Mr Javid’s
letter as “a huge backward step”.
In a move that shows she is completely unfit to be Home
Secretary, Labour MP Diane Abbott has called the decision not to seek
assurances as ‘abhorrent and shameful’.
Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Sir Ed Davey said:
“The use of the death penalty – no matter the crimes involved – is wrong. By
refusing to stand up to Donald Trump’s administration on this issue, Sajid
Javid has abdicated his responsibility to uphold fundamental human rights.”
To that I would say James Foley, Steven Sotloff, David
Haines Peter Kassig and Alan Henning, all tortured, all beheaded and killed
without mercy, their human rights violated.
In the past, the UK has always sought assurances from the
Americans regarding no death penalty, however the request is simply that, a
request, there is no legal duty for any Home Secretary to the request.
So, the question is should the Americans be denied justice
for their citizens who were murdered?
The answer is no, in the UK we don’t have the death penalty,
the same however cannot be said for the US.
A spokeswoman for the Prime Minister said Theresa May
supported the Home Secretary’s handling of the case. She also said that the PM hoped
it would end with the two men remaining in prison for the rest of their lives.
She said:
“The Prime Minister was aware of these plans and supports
the way that these are being handled.”
If you take the time to look at American prison videos, you
will see that the supermax system isn’t a bed of roses, it is a very violent
place full of predators. Alexanda Kotey and El Shafee Elsheikh might escape the
death penalty but chances are they will become high profile targets of
opportunity in prison. Instead of a quick clean death via lethal injection,
they may get a dose of their own medicine repeatedly in prison.
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University
4 comments:
Too bad, so sad. I'm not for the death penalty myself, and it's probably less kind to leave them to rot in prison. Unfortunately, end to capital punishment is unlikely to come in the U.S. for a fair wee while, and ultimately if they're on American soil it's preferable if they end up behind bars, but if the Americans decide to finish them off legally then that's really their purview.
I blog often and I seriously appreciate your content.
The article has truly peaked my interest. I am going to book mark your site and keep checking for new
information about once a week. I opted in for your RSS feed too.
Labour MP Diane Abbott has called the decision not to seek assurances as ‘abhorrent and shameful’.
I thought she was talking about herself...
If the People of the UK were given opportunity to vote for the return of capital punishment i should imagine the political elite would shit themselves but it wouldn’t it be interesting to see the result if it was yes there would be a huge problem,would the politicians try to reverse the will of the people probably.
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