Sunday, 2 May 2010

Taiwan conducts rare executions

Taiwan has put four men to death, the island's first executions since 2005. They had been convicted of a range of "grave offences such as fatal kidnappings and murders", the justice ministry said. Correspondents say the new justice minister, Tseng Yung-fu, had been under pressure from victims' families to resume executions.

Capital punishment is a sensitive political issue in Taiwan, and is widely supported by the public. A Taiwanese human rights group, the Foundation for Judicial Reform, condemned the executions, saying the ministry had deliberately hastened the process. They were shot by firing squad, officials said.

The former justice minister stood down in March after refusing to sign death warrants for 44 prisoners. The last executions in Taiwan were of two people in 2005. A total of 49 people were put to death between 2000 and 2005.

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