Pakistan: Death penalty for juveniles reintroduced
The recent decision by the Lahore High Court that the Juvenile Justice System Ordinance (JJSO) be revoked so that
children can once again be sentenced to death, is a retrograde step which flies in the face of the worldwide movement
towards the abolition of the death penalty for juveniles.
"The government of Pakistan must abide by its commitments under the Convention on the Rights of the Child and take
immediate action to appeal to the Supreme Court to review the judgment and stay its implementation," Amnesty
International said.
A full bench of the Lahore High Court on 6 December 2004 revoked the JJSO, reportedly finding it "unreasonable,
unconstitutional and impracticable". The High Court decision means that juvenile courts will be abolished and children
will once again be tried in the same system as adults and can be sentenced to death. Convictions of juveniles who were
spared the death penalty while the JJSO was in force between 2000 and December 2004, will not be affected by this
judgement but cases pending against juveniles in juvenile courts will be transferred to regular courts.
Background
Implementing obligations under the CRC which Pakistan ratified in 1990, President Pervez Musharraf on 1 July 2000
promulgated the JJSO which prescribes trials of juveniles separate from adult accused and prohibits the imposition of
the death penalty on anyone who has not attained the age of 18 years at the time of the alleged offence. In December
2001, following a meeting with Amnesty International Secrary General Irene Khan, President Musharraf commuted the death
penalty of all those juveniles who had been sentenced to death before July 2000.
Implementing the JJSO has been slow; the setting up of juvenile courts took time and police and many judges of the lower
judiciary remained unaware of its provisions. While the number of juveniles sentenced to death declined, such cases
continued to be reported. In 2003, two Afghan refugee boys were sentenced to death in Quetta. Ziauddin, a handicapped
boy was 13 and Abdul Qadir was 16 at the time of a murder alleged to have been committed by them. They are held in a
small cell in Much Jail, Balochistan, together with six adult men sentenced to death, most of them for murder. The
safety and physical integrity of the boys are a matter of concern for Amnesty International. The Juvenile Justice System
Ordinance which came into force in July 2000, abolished the death penalty for people under 18 at the time of the
offence, in most parts of the country. However, the Ordinance was not extended to the Provincially and Federally
Administered Tribal Areas in the north and west. One young man, Sher Ali, was executed in the Provincially Administered
Tribal Area in November 2001 for a murder committed in 1993 when he was 13 years old. To Amnesty International's
knowledge, no other juvenile has been executed in Pakistan since 1997.
Only in October 2004, Amnesty International welcomed the extension of the JJSO to the The Provincially Administered
Tribal Areas (PATA). Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), the Northern Areas and Azad Jammu and Kashmir remained
outside its ambit.
The commutation order of December 2001 remained only partially implemented, partly on account of difficulties in
determining the age of the juveniles in the absence of adequate documentation.
The judgement of 6 December 2004 of the Lahore High Court arose from the petiton filed by Farooq Naqvi, whose son had
been sodomized and burned alive by several young men including a juvenile who was sentenced to life imprisonment. Farooq
Naqvi believed that the juvenile should have been sentenced to death as well and had been unduly protected by the JJSO.
The Lahore High Court judgment stated that legal provisions existing before the promulgation of the JJSO were adequate
to protect juveniles and that courts were sufficiently sensitive to the needs of juvenile offenders which rendered the
JJSO superfluous. It also stated that the ban on the death penalty had led to adults instigating juveniles to carry out
capital offences on their behalf in the knowledge that they would be treated leniently under the JJSO. This it said, had
led to an increase in the crime rate. Moreover, the JJSO had encouraged corruption on a large scale as families of
accused had procured fake birth, school and medical certificates to establish that the accused were juveniles.
The judgment further challenged the definition of a juvenile as a person below 18 years, saying this was arbitrary.
Social, economic, climatic and dietary factors in Pakistan, it said, accelerated maturity. Laws derived from Islamic
understanding link majority to the attainment of puberty and differentiate between male and female ages of majority. The
judgement moreover held that the preferential treatment of juveniles violates the constitutional guarantee of equality
before the law and equal protection of the law. It held that "what is relevant is the capacity of an accused person to
understand the nature and consequence of his conduct and if an accused is found of sufficient understanding then no
special treatment is warranted by the law."
The judgment also said that in practical terms trying a juvenile separately from an adult presented diffuculties as
juvenile courts and courts trying adults had on occasion reached different conclusions.
Stop child executions! Ending the death penalty for child offenders: http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maacXeBabcoW3bb0hPub/
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