Central African Republic
Information current as of: May 28, 2015
General
Official Country Name
Central African Republic (CAR, Centrafrique, République centrafricaine). [1]
Geographical Region
Africa (Middle Africa). [2]
Death Penalty Law Status
Abolitionist de facto. The last known execution took place in 1981. [3]
Methods of Execution
Shooting.
Executions are carried out by firing squad. [4] The body of the executed prisoner may be released to the family at the family’s request. [5]
The last known executions were carried out in 1981 by firing squad. [6]
References
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Country Details
Language(s)
French (official), Sangho (lingua franca and national language), tribal languages. [1]
Population
4,525,000 (U.N., 2012 est.). [2]
Number of Individuals Currently Under Sentence of Death
The exact number of people under sentence of death at the end of 2018 is not known. [3] Amnesty International reported 14 death sentences in 2010 [4] and we found no reports of new death sentences in the last few years. [5] Following the start of the Seleka rebellion in December 2012, the criminal justice system has been “incapacitated.” [6]
(This question was last updated on May 30, 2019.)
Annual Number of Reported Executions
Executions in 2020 to date (last updated on January 6, 2021)
0. [7] This is the number of executions reported in the media. We are not able to offer a reliable estimate.
Executions in 2019
0. [8]
Executions in 2018
0. [9]
Executions in 2017
0. [10]
Executions in 2016
0. [11]
Executions in 2015
0. [12]
Executions in 2014
0. [13]
Executions in 2013
0. [14]
Executions in 2012
0. [15]
Executions in 2011
0. [16]
Executions in 2010
0. [17]
Executions in 2009
0. [18]
Executions in 2008
0. [19]
Executions in 2007
0. [20]
Year of Last Known Execution
1981. [21]
In January 1981, 6 people convicted of murder were executed by firing squad. [22]
References
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Crimes and Offenders Punishable By Death
Crimes Punishable by Death
Aggravated Murder.
Murder committed by poisoning, [1] murder committed with the aim of cannibalism, [2] and parricide (defined as the murder of a natural or adoptive parent or any other ascendant) [3] are punishable by death.
Murder.
Premeditated murder is punishable by death. [4]
Other Offenses Resulting in Death.
The following offenses are punishable by death if they result in death, even if there was no intent to kill: repeated assault on or negligence of a child younger than 15 years old, [5] arrest or abduction under the false pretense of being a public official, [6] rape, [7] and castration. [8]
The murder section of the Penal Code also provides that committing a felony in order to prepare, facilitate or enable escape for another offense is punishable by death. [9] We interpret this provision as limited to felonies committed to further an offense defined in the section on murder.
Terrorism-Related Offenses Resulting in Death.
The sabotage of any means of transportation [10] and the destruction of machines, buildings, roads, bridges or other structures [11] are punishable by death if they result in death.
Terrorism-Related Offenses Not Resulting in Death.
The sabotage of any means of transportation used by people, [12] the use of an explosive device with a criminal intent [13] and the sabotage or attempted sabotage of strategic equipment [14] are punishable by death.
Rape Not Resulting in Death.
Rape, if preceded, accompanied or followed by abduction or torture, is punishable by death. [15]
Robbery Not Resulting in Death.
Armed robbery is punishable by death. [16]
Kidnapping Not Resulting in Death.
Unlawfully arresting or abducting a person under the false pretense of being a public official is punishable by death if it involves the use of torture. [17] Kidnapping involving rape [18] is also punishable by death.
Treason.
Treason is punishable by death, [19] as is provoking a person to commit treason, [20] offering to commit treason, [21] or failing to denounce a plan involving treason or espionage. [22]
Espionage.
Espionage is punishable by death, [23] as is provoking a person to commit espionage [24] offering to commit espionage, [25] or failing to denounce a plan involving treason or espionage. [26]
War crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.
Genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity are punishable by death. [27]
Other Offenses Not Resulting in Death.
The following offenses are punishable by death:
- Making a false accusation leading to a person being sentenced to death. [28]
- Using torture in connection with another crime. [29]
- Assaulting a member of government or parliament, a judge or a police officer with the intent to kill. [30]
- Attempting a death-eligible crime, [31] including attempting murder by poisoning [32] or attempting the sabotage of strategic equipment. [33]
- Repeat offense: Anyone convicted of a felony and sentenced to forced labor, and who within ten years of his release, commits a second offense and is sentenced to forced labor for life, shall be sentenced to death. [34]
Comments.
In March 2017, CAR passed a new Code of Military Justice that effectively abolished the death penalty for military crimes.
Does the country have a mandatory death penalty?
No. Under Article 50 of the Penal Code, the death penalty can be commuted to forced labour if the court finds mitigating circumstances, except where this is expressly excluded by law. [35] Our review of the law did not identify any provisions that specify that Article 50 does not apply.
For Which Offenses, If Any, Is a Mandatory Death Sentence Imposed?
There is no mandatory death penalty.
Crimes For Which Individuals Have Been Executed Since January 2008:
No individual has been executed since 1981. [36]
Categories of Offenders Excluded From the Death Penalty:
Individuals Below Age 18 At Time of Crime.
The Central African Republic is party to the ICCPR [37] and to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, [38] which prohibit the execution of individuals for crimes committed while under the age of 18. Article 9 of the Penal Code, which allows broad discretion in sentencing for children between 14 and 18, does not expressly exclude the death penalty from the range of punishments available. [39] We have found no reports, however, that juveniles have been sentenced or executed in the Central African Republic.
Pregnant Women.
Under article 26 of the Penal Code, the execution of a pregnant woman is postponed until 3 years after she has given birth. [40] This conforms with the state’s obligations as party to the ICCPR, [41] which prohibits the execution of pregnant women.
Women With Small Children.
While women with small children at the time of the offense or sentencing are not excluded by law from capital punishment, if a woman is pregnant at the time of sentence or execution, her execution is postponed until 3 years after she has given birth. [42]
Mentally Ill.
Article 8 of the Penal Code states that the offender is not held criminally liable where the acts were committed under the influence of a mental or neuropsychological disorder which has prevented him from recognizing or controlling his actions (“commis sous l’empire d’un trouble psychique ou neuropsychique ayant aboli le discernement ou le contrôle des actes”). [43] We found no laws prohibiting the execution of prisoners who become mentally ill following the offense and suffer from mental illness at the time of the execution.
References
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International Commitments
ICCPR
Party?
Yes. [1]
Date of Accession
May 8, 1981. [2]
Signed?
No. [3]
Date of Signature
Not Applicable.
First Optional Protocol to the ICCPR, Recognizing Jurisdiction of the Human Rights Committee
Party?
Yes. [4]
Date of Accession
May 8, 1981. [5]
Signed?
No. [6]
Date of Signature
Not Applicable.
Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR, Toward the Abolition of the Death Penalty
Party?
No. [7]
Date of Accession
Not Applicable.
Signed?
No. [8]
Date of Signature
Not Applicable.
American Convention on Human Rights
Party?
Not Applicable.
Date of Accession
Signed?
Not Applicable.
Date of Signature
Death Penalty Protocol to the ACHR
Party?
Not Applicable.
Date of Accession
Signed?
Not Applicable.
Date of Signature
African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (ACHPR)
Party?
Yes. [9]
Date of Accession
April 26, 1986. [10]
Signed?
Yes. [11]
Date of Signature
February 4, 2003. [12]
Protocol to the ACHPR on the Rights of Women in Africa
Party?
No. [13]
Date of Accession
Not Applicable.
Signed?
Yes. [14]
Date of Signature
June 17, 2008. [15]
African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child
Party?
No. [16]
Date of Accession
Not Applicable.
Signed?
Yes. [17]
Date of Signature
February 4, 2003. [18]
Arab Charter on Human Rights
Party?
Not Applicable.
Date of Accession
Signed?
Not Applicable.
Date of Signature
2018 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
Cosponsor
No. [19]
Vote
In Favor. [20]
Signed the Note Verbale of Dissociation
No. [21]
2016 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
Cosponsor
No. [22]
Vote
In Favor. [23]
Signed the Note Verbale of Dissociation
No.
2014 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
Cosponsor
No. [24]
Vote
In Favor. [25]
Signed the Note Verbale of Dissociation
No. [26]
2012 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
Cosponsor
No. [27]
Vote
In Favor. [28]
Signed the Note Verbale of Dissociation
No. [29]
2010 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
Cosponsor
No. [30]
Vote
Abstained. [31]
Signed the Note Verbale of Dissociation
Yes. [32]
2008 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
Cosponsor
No. [33]
Vote
Abstained. [34]
Signed the Note Verbale of Dissociation
Yes. [35]
2007 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
Cosponsor
No. [36]
Vote
Abstained. [37]
Signed the Note Verbale of Dissociation
Yes. [38]
References
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Death Penalty In Law
Does the country’s constitution make reference to capital punishment?
The 2004 Constitution does not make direct reference to the death penalty. Under Article 1, the human person is “sacred and inviolable” and state authorities have an “absolute obligation to respect and protect it.” Article 3 guarantees the right to life and to physical integrity. This right cannot be infringed upon without due process of law, implying that a limited application of capital punishment could be constitutional. [1]
In July 2013, following the coup d’état led by the Seleka rebel alliance, the 2004 Constitution was suspended in favor of a transitional Constitutional Charter. Article 1 of the Constitutional Charter protects the “sacred and inviolable” nature of the human person, in the same terms as the 2004 Constitution. Article 3 of the Charter guarantees “the right to life and to bodily integrity,” stating that “these rights may not be violated.” Article 3 also prohibits “torture,…and cruel, inhuman, degrading or humiliating treatment,” adding that any person, state agent or organization that commits such acts “shall be punished according to law.” [2]
Does the country’s constitution make reference to international law?
Under Article 72 of the 2004 Constitution, properly ratified treaties take precedence over legislation. [3] The Central African Republic being a party to the ICCPR [4] and the ACHPR, [5] those treaties’ death penalty provisions are directly binding on national courts. Moreover, the Constitution’s preamble “reaffirms” the country’s commitment to “all duly ratified international conventions,” specifically citing the ICCPR and the ACHPR. [6]
In July 2013, following the coup d’état led by the Seleka rebel alliance, the 2004 Constitution was suspended in favour of a transitional Constitutional Charter. The Constitutional Charter reproduces all the provisions cited above from the 2004 Constitution. [7]
Have there been any significant changes in the application of the death penalty over the last several years?
Before the profound crisis triggered by the Seleka rebellion and coup, the Central African Republic seemed to be making slow but clear progress towards the abolition of capital punishment. No executions had been carried out since 1981, [8] the number of death-eligible crimes decreased when a new penal code was drafted in 2010 (death was eliminated, for instance, for offenses against public property [9] and for witchcraft [10] ), and courts were handing down fewer death sentences – 14 in 2010, [11] none in 2011 [12] or 2012. [13] In October 2011, the Minister of Justice, Firmin Feindiro, indicated his willingness to consider abolition during a regional conference on the death penalty that challenged the idea that abolition should be dictated by public opinion. [14] In late 2012, for the first time, the CAR voted in favor of the UN General Assembly’s Resolution to impose a global moratorium on the use of the death penalty, joining the majority of the world’s states. [15]
Following the start of the Seleka offensive in December 2012, there has been a collapse of state authority, including the judicial sector, and as of July 2014, the state judicial system was “virtually non-existent,” especially outside of Bangui. [16] Nevertheless, on the international stage, the CAR appears to be pursuing its shift towards abolition. At its most recent Universal Periodic Review before the UN Human Rights Council in 2013, the CAR accepted, for the first time, recommendations that it abolish the death penalty. [17] This position contrasted with its rejection of similar recommendation at its previous UPR in 2009, when the CAR delegation stated that abolition was still under discussion given that it was widely supported by the population in light of high crime rates. [18] Moreover, at the UN General Assembly’s 2014 vote on a global moratorium on capital punishment, the CAR again voted in favor. [19] In March 2017, CAR passed a new Code of Military Justice that effectively abolished the death penalty for military crimes.
The positions taken by the CAR before these international bodies form a striking contrast with the grievous and widespread violations of human rights committed by both sides with complete impunity since the beginning of the civil conflict. Fact-finding investigations by human rights organizations have found evidence of summary executions, torture, rape and pillage committed, according to the Prosecutor of Bangui, on a daily basis. [20]
Is there currently an official moratorium on executions within the country?
There is no official moratorium and we found no evidence of an informal moratorium on executions within the country.
Have there been any significant published cases concerning the death penalty in national courts?
We could not locate any published cases on the death penalty in national courts.
Where can one locate or access judicial decisions regarding the death penalty?
By the conclusion of our research we did not locate any sources for judicial decisions from national courts. Searches in the WorldLII and JURICAF databases came up empty.
We note that under Article 25 of the Penal Code, any court judgment imposing death must be published in the press and posted in the cities where the death sentence was pronounced, where the offence was perpetrated and where the accused is domiciled. [21]
What is the clemency process?
Under Article 22 of the 2004 Constitution, it is the President’s prerogative to grant pardons and commute sentences. [22] Neither a pardon nor a commutation may be granted for genocide, crimes against humanity or war crimes. [23]
In July 2013, following the coup d’état led by the Seleka rebel alliance, the 2004 Constitution was suspended in favor of a transitional Constitutional Charter. Under the Constitutional Charter, the transitional head of state has the prerogative to grant pardons and commutations. [24]
Are jury trials provided for defendants charged with capital offenses?
Yes. Criminal courts, which have jurisdiction over capital cases, [25] are composed of 3 professional judges and 3 jury members drawn by lot. [26]
Brief Description of Appellate Process
Capital cases are tried before the Criminal Court composed of 3 judges and 6 jury members, [27] and appealed to the Criminal Chamber of the Court of Cassation (which rules only on matters of law, remanding cases for retrial in cases of error). [28] There is no appeal from rulings of the Court of Cassation. [29]
References
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Death Penalty In Practice
Where Are Death-Sentenced Prisoners incarcerated?
Prior to the coup led by the Seleka forces, media reports indicated that one foreign national charged with a death-eligible offense (and later released after the charges were dropped) was held at Ngaragba Prison in the capital, Bangui. [1] It is possible that death-sentenced inmates were detained in Ngaragba prison’s separate maximum security wing. [2] The country’s main women’s prison is Bimbo Central Prison in Bangui, [3] and women sentenced to death may have been detained there. It is possible that death-sentenced prisoners were also held in prisons outside the capital. Individuals detained in relation to national security offenses were reportedly detained separately from other prisoners and held without charge indefinitely. [4]
It is not clear, however, whether prisons still hold death-sentenced inmates. The Seleka rebels are reported to have emptied prisons as they moved across the country towards the capital, Bangui. [5] The Seleka forces replaced the freed prisoners with their own, and also detained people outside of prisons, in homes, military camps, and government facilities. [6] In January 2014, an attack by an anti-Balaka militia (Christian and animist militias engaged in fighting the Seleka) led to the escape of all the prisoners held in Ngaragba Prison. [7] Several more mass escapes followed. [8] We do not know whether any death-sentenced prisoners were freed or escaped, nor where they may currently be detained.
Description of Prison Conditions
Before the Seleka rebellion, prison conditions in general were reported to be very harsh and life threatening. [9] Prison buildings are old and dilapidated. Ngaragba, the men’s prison in the capital, Bangui, was built in 1947. Cells are devoid of any furniture. [10] Many prisoners sleep directly on the floor on bare concrete. [11] Prisoners were allowed to go outside during the day, but the outdoor areas are also very dilapidated. [12] Basic necessities, including food, clothing and medicine, were reported to be “inadequate and often confiscated by prison officials.” [13] The one meal provided per day was insufficient, and families were allowed to bring food to prisoners. [14] Most prisons lacked basic sanitation and ventilation, electricity, medical care, and sufficient potable water. [15] Men and women were held separately, but juveniles were sometimes held with adults and pre-trial defendants with convicted prisoners. [16] Deaths due to negligence and frequent use of beatings and torture were reported. [17] Authorities punished prison inmates by chaining and depriving them of food and water for several days at a time. [18]
We do not know if there are currently any women under sentence of death, but detention conditions in the Bimbo Central Prison for women were deemed by a UN team to be “substantially better” than those of other prisons. [19] In 2012, the Bangui-Bimbo women’s prison housed 31 women and 3 girls in separate dormitories. [20] There was reportedly no overcrowding. [21] Many of these women were accused of witchcraft and had been detained for several months without appearing before a judge; most did not have lawyers. [22] Children under the age of 5 were allowed to remain with their mothers in prison. [23] There have been reports, however, of sexual violence against women prisoners. In 2008, it was reported that the worst cases of violence against women took place in prisons. [24] In 2010, there were two recorded cases of rape and attempted rape of women prisoners by male guards. [25]
Little is known about prisons and prison inmates since the civil war and the coup led by the Seleka rebels. The Seleka are reported to have emptied prisons as they moved across the country towards the capital, Bangui, [26] replacing the freed prisoners with their own, and detaining people outside of prisons, in homes, military camps, and government facilities. [27] Furthermore, the Seleka reportedly destroyed records in many prisons during their march to the capital, [28] making it difficult to track prisoners’ sentences. In January 2014, an attack by an anti-Balaka militia (Christian and animist militias engaged in fighting the Seleka) led to the escape of all the prisoners held in Ngaragba Prison. [29] Several more mass escapes followed. [30] We do not know whether any death-sentenced prisoners were freed by the Seleka or escaped, nor where they may currently be detained. By April 2014, reportedly only “minor criminals” were left in Ngaragba Prison. [31]
Are there any known foreign nationals currently under sentence of death?
By the conclusion of our research, we did not find any information about foreigners under sentence of death in the CAR.
What are the nationalities of the known foreign nationals on death row?
By the conclusion of our research, we did not find any information about foreigners under sentence of death in the CAR.
Are there any known women currently under sentence of death?
Since “many of the prisoners incarcerated in Central African Republic prisons are women accused of witchcraft” [32] and since capital punishment was one of the sentences provided for witchcraft until the 2010 amendment of the Penal Code, [33] there might be women presently on death row. We have found no recent reports of women being sentenced to death.
Are there any reports of individuals currently under sentence of death who may have been under the age of 18 at the time the crime was committed?
By the conclusion of our research, we did not find reports of individuals currently under sentence of death who may have been under the age of 18 at the time the crime was committed. There have been no recent reports of juvenile executions in the CAR.
Comments regarding the racial/ethnic composition on death row
While did not find any information on the ethnic composition of death row. Reports indicate that the Ba’Aka – Pygmies who represent 1 to 2 percent of the population – have been subjected to legal discrimination and unfair trials, [34] but we do not know if any are under sentence of death.
Are there lawyers available for indigent defendants facing capital trials?
The Code of Criminal Procedure mandates that the Criminal Court designate a lawyer to represent criminal defendants who are without counsel. [35] In 2005, the CAR reported to the Human Rights Committee that “legal assistance is granted automatically to anyone charged before an assize court.” [36] Reports predating the Seleka coup indicate that in practice lawyers were provided to indigent defendants at no cost, although the scarcity of resources affected the availability of legal aid and led to delays in trial proceedings. [37]
Following the start of the Seleka rebellion in December 2012, there has reportedly been a “near collapse” of state authority, including the judiciary, and as of July 2014, the state judicial system was “virtually non-existent.” [38] Judges and court staff have fled their jurisdictions for the capital, court buildings have been looted and documents destroyed, and Seleka members have taken the place of judges and prosecutors in some areas. In 2013, the UNHRC mission in Bangui received reports of attacks on judges and lawyers in retaliation for past verdicts. [39] In this context, it is unlikely the legal aid system is still operational, but some lawyers are reportedly continuing to work and are “sometimes accessible.” [40]
Are there lawyers available for indigent prisoners on appeal?
By the conclusion of our research, we could not confirm whether the legal assistance mandated by law to indigent criminal defendants [41] extends to the appeals process.
In any event, following the start of the Seleka rebellion in December 2012, there has reportedly been a “near collapse” of state authority, including the judiciary, and as of July 2014, the state judicial system was “virtually non-existent.” [42] Judges and court staff have fled their jurisdictions for the capital, court buildings have been looted and documents destroyed, and Seleka members have taken the place of judges and prosecutors in some areas. In 2013, the UNHRC mission in Bangui received reports of attacks on judges and lawyers in retaliation for past verdicts. [43] In this context, it is unlikely the legal aid system is still operational, but some lawyers are reportedly continuing to work and are “sometimes accessible.” [44]
Comments on Quality of Legal Representation
Prior to the Seleka offensive and coup, resource limitations led, at the very least, to delays in assigning representation to indigent defendants and to delayed trial proceedings. [45] We found no further information on the quality of legal representation in the CAR.
Following the start of the Seleka rebellion in December 2012, there has reportedly been a “near collapse” of state authority, including the judiciary, and as of July 2014, the state judicial system was “virtually non-existent.” [46] Judges and court staff have fled their jurisdictions for the capital, court buildings have been looted and documents destroyed, and Seleka members have taken the place of judges and prosecutors in some areas. In 2013, the UNHRC mission in Bangui received reports of attacks on judges and lawyers in retaliation for past verdicts. [47] In this context, it is unlikely the legal aid system is still operational, but some lawyers are reportedly continuing to work and are “sometimes accessible.” [48]
Other Comments on Criminal Justice System
Following the start of the Seleka rebellion in late 2012, there has been a “near collapse” of state authority, including the judiciary, and as of July 2014, the state judicial system was “virtually non-existent,” especially outside of Bangui. [49] Beginning in December 2012, judges and court staff fled their jurisdictions for the capital, court buildings were looted and documents destroyed, and Seleka members took the place of judges and prosecutors in some areas. In 2013, the UNHRC mission in Bangui received reports of attacks on judges and lawyers in retaliation for past verdicts. [50] By July 2013, all the remaining state judicial services were controlled by the Seleka and individuals were arrested and detained without any semblance of due process. Many grievous abuses were committed in this context, including summary executions, torture, and rape. [51]
In 2014, the Prosecutor of Bangui, Ghislain Gresenguet, stated that the “penal system was incapacitated.” [52] There is complete impunity for perpetrators of criminal offenses including gross human rights violations, who are not being investigated or prosecuted. [53]
Prior to the Seleka offensive and coup, the judicial system had serious failings. Warrants were not required for arrest, and although the law required that an arrested individual be brought before a judge within 72 or 144 hours, these deadlines were not respected in practice. Long-lasting pretrial detention was therefore a serious problem, with many detainees held for several months before seeing a judge and some remaining in prison for years before their trials took place. [54] Moreover, judicial corruption was widespread, [55] and judges’ jobs and safety were threatened. [56] In 2010, the International Federation for Human Rights expressed concern after the arrest of the President of the Central African Bar and 3 of his colleagues without any charge being brought against them. [57]
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Decisions of International Human Rights Bodies
Decisions of Human Rights Committee
In its 2006 Concluding Observations, the Human Rights Committee recommended that the CAR continue a policy of abolition in practice and “ensure that the death penalty is not extended to new crimes,” particularly crimes included in the Rome Statute. The Committee expressed concern over the CAR’s position that retaining the death penalty was necessary in light of the country’s high crime rate in the country, and encouraged the CAR “to abolish the death penalty and to accede to the Second Optional Protocol to the Covenant.” [1]
Decisions of Other Human Rights Bodies
At its 2013 Universal Periodic Review before the U.N. Human Rights Council, the Central African Republic accepted the recommendations that it abolish the death penalty and ratify the Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR aiming at universal abolition. It also accepted a recommendation to adopt an official moratorium on executions and speed up the process of abolition with the help of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. [2]
This marks a notable change from its previous UPR in 2009, at which the CAR had agreed with Egypt that it would “[c]ontinue exercising its sovereign right of implementing its penal code in conformity with universally agreed human rights standards, including the application of the death penalty.” [3] Government representatives had suggested to the Working Group that capital punishment could be abolished during the projected 2009-2010 reform of criminal laws, in particular because it was no longer applied. [4] The delegation later concluded, however, that “the matter was still under discussion, indicating that the majority was opposed to such an abolition because of the high rate of crime.” [5] The CAR did support the recommendation that it “ensure comprehensive training and education for all security forces and prison staff in human rights and international humanitarian law, and adopt legal and other necessary measures to ensure their full accountability for any violations of these norms.” [6]
References
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Additional Sources and Contacts
Direct member(s) of World Coalition Against the Death Penalty
None.
Other non-governmental organizations and individuals engaged in advocacy surrounding the death penalty
Ligue Centrafricaine des Droits de l’Homme (LCDH)
Mr. Joseph Bindoumi, President
B.P. 2094
Bangui, Rép. Centrafricaine
Tel: +236 75 50 76 74
[email protected]
ACAT République Centrafricaine
B.P. 527
Bangui, Rép. Centrafricaine
[email protected]
Association des femmes juristes centrafricaines (AFJC)
Avenue de l’indépendance
Bangui, Rép. Centrafricaine
Tel: +236 70 17 34 32 / 75 50 31 23
[email protected]
Helpful Reports and Publications
The Advocates for Human Rights, Central African Republic: Submission to the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review, http://www.theadvocatesforhumanrights.org/uploads/central_african_republic_hrc_death_penalty_october_2013.pdf, Oct. 2013.
Reports on the human rights crisis in the country since the beginning of the Seleka offensive include:
FIDH, Central African Republic: “They Must All Leave Or Die”, https://www.fidh.org/IMG/pdf/rapport_rca_2014-uk-04.pdf, Jun. 2014.
Human Rights Watch, “I Can Still Smell the Dead”: The Forgotten Human Rights Crisis in the Central African Republic, http://www.hrw.org/reports/2013/09/18/i-can-still-smell-dead, Sep. 18, 2013.
Human Rights Watch, “They Came To Kill”: Escalating Atrocities in the Central African Republic, http://www.hrw.org/reports/2013/12/18/they-came-kill, Dec. 19, 2013.