MK. A first draft law seeking abolition was proposed several years ago to the National Assembly, who rejected it. At the time, the country was just coming out of the war, and deputies were more concerned with security issues. The Honourable André Mbata, the deputy behind the first bill, proposed another in 2019. It has still not been entered onto the parliamentary agenda and is pending review by the National Assembly.
During the 6th World Congress against the Death Penalty in Oslo in 2016, the government pledged to abolish the death penalty. This rhetoric has not translated into action: the government has not proposed any legislation in Parliament despite holding the majority. The President of the Republic has used his power to pardon several times and released some people who had been sentenced to death. But these small achievements are not enough. The government must show that it is firmly committed to moving towards abolishing the death penalty, and that it is not solely concerned with electoral and security issues.
Recently passed legislation states that sexual violence resulting in death no longer qualifies for a death sentence. In this case, the death penalty has been “abolished”. We are asking for that to be extended to all offences.
Several opportunities favourable to abolition have already occurred. The Military Penal Code was amended in 2015 to align national law with the Rome Statute establishing the International Criminal Court (ICC). As the death penalty is not included in the range of sentences applicable by the ICC, we believed this would be an opportunity to abolish it definitively. Unfortunately, that has not been the case: the code did incorporate the international criminal offences of the Rome Statute, but it made them punishable by death.