(BAGHDAD) — Iraq’s Justice Ministry says authorities have executed 21 prisoners convicted on terrorism charges and links to al-Qaeda.
The ministry said Wednesday the executions were carried out on Tuesday by hanging. It says all the men were Iraqi al-Qaida operatives who were involved in bombings, car bomb attacks and assassinations.
The hangings brought the number of prisoners executed in Iraq so far this year to 50.
Iraq has dismissed calls from international human rights organizations to reconsider capital punishment. Executions are usually carried out by hanging.
Last year, Iraq executed 129 people, triggering concerns among rights groups on whether defendants received a fair trial.
According to the London-based Amnesty International, Iraq was ranked fourth among the top five executioners in the world in 2011, after China, Iran, Saudi Arabia and U.S.
On August 8, 2004, capital punishment was reinstated in Iraq. Iraqi law states that no person over the age of 70 can be executed, despite people like Tariq Aziz, sentenced to death at the age of 74.There is an automatic right to appeal on all such sentences. Iraqi Law requires execution within 30 days of all legal avenues being exhausted. The last legal step, before the execution proceeds, is for the condemned to be handed a red card. This is completed by an official of the court with details of the judgment and a notice that execution is imminent.http://world.time.com/2013/04/17/iraq-executes-21-men-convicted-of-terrorism/#ixzz2QjVKR4we
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_Iraq
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