EU Policy On The Death Penalty
Brussels, 14 July 2003
EUROPEAN UNION
THE COUNCIL
11249/03 (Presse 204)
P 83/03
Declaration by the Presidency on Behalf of the European
Union to Mark the Entry into Force of Protocol No. 13 to the
European
Convention on Human Rights, Concerning the Abolition of the Death Penalty in
all Circumstances
The European Union welcomes the entry into force on 1 July
2003 of Protocol No. 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights,
concerning the abolition of the death penalty in all circumstances.
This Protocol is banning the death penalty in all
circumstances, including for crimes committed in times of war and imminent
threat of war. No derogation or reservation will be allowed to Protocol No.
13 to the European Convention on Human Rights. As of today, 41 out of the 45
Member States of the Council of Europe have signed the Protocol, which was
opened for signature by member states of the Council of Europe only a little
over a year ago, in Vilnius, on 3 May 2002.
The abolition of the death penalty also in respect of acts
committed in time of war or of imminent threat of war should be discussed
within the wider contest of the global trend towards the universal abolition
of the death penalty.
The European Union urges Member States of the Council of
Europe, who have not yet done so, to sign Protocol 13 and to ratify Protocol
6 which abolishes the death penalty in times of peace. The European Union
also expresses the hope that Japan and the United States, who have
observatory status to the Council of Europe, will feel encouraged to
consider steps towards the abolition of the death penalty.
The European Union reiterates its longstanding and firm
position against the use of the death penalty in all circumstances-a
punishment which we believe impairs the human dignity, increases the level
of brutality and provides no added value in terms of deterrence.
Consequently, all European Union countries have abolished the death penalty.
It is worth noting in this respect that the international community has
excluded the use of the death penalty in establishing international criminal
courts and tribunals competent for the most heinous crimes such as genocide
and crimes against humanity.
In countries which maintain the death penalty, the EU aims
at the progressive restriction of its scope and respect for the strict
conditions, set forth in several international human rights instruments,
under which the capital punishment may be used, as well as at the
establishment of a moratorium on executions so as to completely eliminate
the death penalty. The EU reiterates its concern about sentencing to death
persons below 18 years of age at the time of the commission of the crime.
The European Union's aspiration is to see the death penalty
abolished in law and in practise in every country in the world, in times of
peace and war.
The Acceding Countries Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia,
Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, the Slovak Republic and Slovenia,
the Associated Countries Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey and the EFTA
countries, members of the European Economic Area align themselves with this
declaration.
