UN votes once again to end executions
amnesty international/un.org
05-Dec-2010 (one comment)
...The resolution was adopted by 107 votes in favour, 38 against with 36 abstentions at the UN General Assembly's Third Committee in New York.   The resolution garnered more support from UN Member States than the previous resolution in 2008, confirming the worldwide trend towards ending the use of capital punishment.

“This third resolution by the UN General Assembly in favour of a moratorium on executions is yet another milestone in the campaign to end premeditated killing by the state,” said José Luis Díaz, Amnesty International’s representative at the UN in New York.“Once again, a clear majority of countries have committed to the goal of abolishing the death penalty, the ultimate denial of human rights”.

When the UN was founded in 1945 only eight states had abolished the death penalty for all crimes. Today, 136 out of the 192 UN member states have abolished the death penalty in law or practice.

Bhutan, Kiribati, Maldives, Mongolia and Togo changed their vote to back the moratorium. In a further sign of support, Afghanistan, Comoros, Nigeria, Solomon Islands and Thailand moved from opposition to abstention...
  The General Assembly is expected to endorse the resolution in its plenary session in December.

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DelilahNY

Pulliing the chair on state-sponsored murder

by DelilahNY on

Here is the more detailed un item.
Unfortunately, this document doesn't list the countries in the vote but the one from the first resolution in 2007 does, aaaall the way at the bottom, under Annex VI. The minority against were a predictable mishmash of Sharia ccountries, places like China and North Korea, and of course these great United States,and a bunch of little island countries (that probably couldn't exist without US aid).  With a few surprising exceptions.


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