Law & order
Jordan hangs 11 after lifting execution ban
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Execution at dawn of eleven convicted criminals ends Jordan's informal
eight-year moratorium on the death penalty.
Last updated: 21 Dec 2014 08:42
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Eleven criminals convicted in difference
cases of murder were executed at dawn [File/Reuters]
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Jordan has executed 11
men convicted of murder by hanging, the interior ministry said, as it ended
an informal eight-year moratorium on the death penalty.
"Eleven criminals
convicted in different cases of murder were executed at dawn," the
official Petra news agency quoted a ministry spokesman as saying on Sunday.
Authorities said the
men were all Jordanians convicted on murder charges in 2005 and 2006.
Jordan's last previous
executions were in June 2006 and 122 people have since been sentenced to
death.
Interior Minister
Hussein Majali suggested recently that the moratorium might end, saying there
was a "major debate" in Jordan on the death penalty and that
"the public believes that the rise in crime has been the result of the non-application" of capital punishment.
A number of countries
in the Middle East continue to impose the death penalty for serious crimes,
including Jordan's neighbour Saudi Arabia which has executed 83 people so far
this year.
China by far carried
out the most executions last year, numbering in the thousands, followed by
Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the United States, human rights group Amnesty
International said in a report in March/
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