- Source: Capital punishment in Afghanistan
Capital punishment refers to the execution of an offender sentenced to death after conviction of a criminal offense. Capital punishment is legal in Afghanistan and can be carried out secretly or publicly due to the current governmental system. The main methods of execution employed by the Afghan government on convicts are hangings and shootings. Stoning, amputation, and flogging are also sometimes used as a method for punishment, and were especially prominent during the late 1990s. Public executions have existed throughout Afghanistan's history. The former Afghan government took important steps away from the use of the death penalty, but they have continued with the Taliban returning to power in August 2021. Some executions have been recently condemned by the United Nations. UN experts have called on Afghan authorities "to halt immediately all forms of torturous, cruel, and degrading forms of punishments." The capital offenses in Afghanistan include a range of crimes from murder to adultery, and are governed by Sharia, along with civil laws.
Capital Offenses
The capital offenses include the serious crimes and are governed by Sharia laws, along with civil laws. The capital offences includes:
Adultery
Apostasy
Arson
Blasphemy
Espionage
Fornication
Homosexual intercourse
Murder
Perjury
Terrorism
Notable Executions
April 2004 – Abdullah Shah was executed by shooting inside Pul-e-Charkhi prison outside Kabul.
October 2007 – Fifteen prisoners were executed by shooting inside Pul-e-Charkhi prison, including Reza Khan.
June 2011 – Two mass killers were executed by hanging in Pul-e-Charkhi prison. One of the killers was Zar Ajam, a 17-year-old from Waziristan, Pakistan, who had randomly shot dead 40 people inside a branch of New Kabul Bank in Jalalabad.
November 2012 – Fourteen prisoners were hanged inside Pul-e-Charkhi prison.
October 2014 – Five men were executed by hanging inside Pul-e-Charkhi prison. The men were accused of robbery and gang rapes.
May 2016 – Six men were executed by hanging inside Pul-e-Charkhi prison on charges of terrorism.
December 2022 – One man who had confessed to murder was executed in public at a crowded sports stadium in Farah Province. This is the first instance of public execution since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.
June 2023 – A man found guilty of murdering five people was sentenced to death and executed with an assault rifle by the son of one of his victims. The execution took place outside a mosque.
February 2024 – Two men were convicted for separate murders were shot by the relatives of their victims and executed while thousands watched at stadium in Ghazni.
February 2024 – A man convicted of murder was shot five times by the brother of the murdered man in a sports stadium in northern Afghanistan. This was the third death sentence of this nature to be carried out in a five day span.
See also
Judicial corporal punishment in Afghanistan
List of prisons in Afghanistan
Capital punishment by country
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Negara Islam Irak dan Syam
- Pemerkosaan
- Penindasan Diokletianus
- Agama Weda
- Pertempuran Mogadishu (1993)
- Capital punishment in Afghanistan
- Capital punishment
- Judicial corporal punishment in Afghanistan
- Capital punishment in Judaism
- Capital punishment by country
- Capital punishment in the United States
- LGBTQ rights in Afghanistan
- Capital punishment for homosexuality
- Capital punishment for non-violent offenses
- Hanging