Abdul
Kader Mullah, the leader of the Jamaat-e-Islami Party recently
sentenced to life imprisonment in Bangladesh, applied to the court of
appeal and was sentenced to death by the Supreme Court while waiting for
the ruling to be overturned. This sentence of death, due to be carried
out quietly, has been exposed to the eyes of the world, particularly as a
result of our reactions in social media. The Bangladeshi government
therefore postponed the sentence for one day and sought to gain time by
saying it would be reconsidered by the court. At the court hearing one
day later, the defense was heard solely as a formality, and the sentence
of death was again imposed without any additional counsel being sought.
Head of state Sheikh Hasina announced via Twitter that all the members
of the Jamaat-e-Islami, denounced as war criminals on the grounds of
having collaborated with Pakistan during the war of independence in
1971, would suffer the same fate and stated that Bangladesh is a secular
country. However, capital punishment is a terrible practice
diametrically opposed to secularism; it survives only in states that
operate as empires of fear.
It
is not a punishment that allows the culprit to repent, to amend his
ways or to learn from the past; once a person is dead, there is no way
he can learn from the past, repent or amend his ways. If the aim is the
security of society, the same or better outcomes can be achieved with
life imprisonment or through rehabilitation.
Capital
punishment is an outmoded form of punishment that savage societies,
devoid of any religious or moral values, used to regard as the only
solution and that brings no happiness to the societies that enforce it.
On the contrary, it turns those communities into brutal ones that seek
to resolve all problems by killing, and it is always those states
themselves that suffer the penalty. Sheikh Hasina may imagine that
capital punishment can enforce discipline in her country. However,
executions will always worsen the anger in a community, government
supporters will always seek to achieve their ends through
state-sanctioned homicide, and that scourge will inevitably rebound
against the government itself. This can be better understood from a
brief look at the countries in which capital punishment is still
official policy.
Capital
punishment is an outrage that cannot be softened by any calming words
such as “sentencing law” or “social order”. Muslim countries in
particular should avoid this. Islam regards killing as a sin and teaches
that killing one person is the same as killing all mankind. Some people
may object to these words by citing verses about restitution from the
Qur’an. However, what Allah truly desires and finds pleasing is
forgiveness:
You
who believe! Retaliation is prescribed for you in the case of people
killed: free man for free man, slave for slave, female for female. But
if someone is absolved by his brother, blood-money should be claimed
with correctness and paid with good will. That is an easement and a
mercy from your Lord. Anyone who goes beyond the limits after this will
receive a painful punishment. (Surat al-Baqara, 178)
The
repayment of a bad action is one equivalent to it. But if someone
pardons and puts things right, his reward is with Allah. Certainly He
does not love wrongdoers. (Surat al-Shu’ra, 199)
As
these verses from the Qur’an clearly show, the important thing is to
forgive and reform. The death penalty does away with the religious duty
of forgiveness. It eliminates any possibility of reformation and
reintegration in society. The education that should be given in respect
to the criminal in Muslim societies should be as described in this
verse:
Make allowances for people, command what is right, and turn away from the ignorant. (Surat al-Ar’af, 199)
Therefore,
what needs to be done in the view of Islam is first to forgive the
guilty party and then teach him the fine moral virtues of Islam. To
construct and enforce such a savage system as capital punishment, which
is more a matter of revenge than justice, in order to gain votes or to
avoid having to look after people sentenced to life imprisonment is a
grave sin in the eyes of Islam.
For
that reason, all countries, including Bangladesh, must speedily abolish
the death penalty. All death sentences must be commuted to life
imprisonment as a matter of urgency; that is what is compatible with
Islam and social order. The death sentence handed down to Abdul Kader
Mullah in Bangladesh, which may be enforced at any moment today, must be
lifted at once. Otherwise, such death sentences will continue to be
silently handed down and silently enforced. Such savagery must not be
allowed to continue, particularly in a country such as Bangladesh, which
has serious flaws in its legal system. It needs to be known that if
Mullah is put to death, the turmoil in Bangladeshi society will increase
and that this will be followed in turn by new death sentences. That is
why a loud campaign needs to be started so that all institutions can
make their voices heard and so that death sentences can be halted not
only in Bangladesh, but throughout the world. We urgently await your
support.
http://harun-yahya.net/en/Eser-Tipi/175817/Capital-punishment-is-a-violation-of-human-rights-and-must-be-eliminated
Monday, January 1, 2018
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