You Are Here: FrontPage Local News


Monday, October 28, 2002 - Web posted at 8:17:38 GMT

Parliament urged to tread with care on death penalty

WERNER MENGES

RE-INTRODUCING the death penalty - which has been raised repeatedly in the National Assembly during debate on Namibia's crime situation - should only be seen as a last-ditch solution, says opposition MP Nora Schimming-Chase.

In her contribution, Schimming-Chase cautioned against returning to the morbid pre-Independence practice of the hangman's noose.

The topic has, since CoD leader Ben Ulenga kicked it off a month ago, turned into one of the Assembly's most active recent debates.

Several MPs have suggested that re-introducing capital punishment is what is needed to effectively stop the wave of crime that has rolled over Namibia in recent years.

Schimming-Chase responded that she has great respect for those who wrote Namibia's Constitution - in which the death penalty was abolished - and that their decisions were not taken lightly.

Emerging from the apartheid system, where the death penalty was used to liquidate political opponents, they knew what they were doing, she said.

"Before we even contemplate debating this issue, we should look at it as a last-ditch solution. If all else fails," the CoD MP cautioned.

The first step was to try and establish the root causes of crime, she said, adding that poverty and unemployment doubtless played a crucial role.

"If more than 10 000 teenagers drop out of school annually, without prospects of further study or unemployment, what opportunities do they have? Our prisons today are overcrowded with young men who fall in this category. If there is no motivation for the youth, if they see no role for themselves in society, then crime becomes a quick-fix solution."

The reason, Schimming-Chase suggested, was because the message sent out from what happened to those in authority who committed offences - where people are put on paid leave, are transferred or promoted - simply is that crime pays.

As long as present shortcomings in the fight against crime were not solved, she added, the death penalty "will not be a magic solution to inadequately trained officials, the death penalty will not replace the destroyed (Police) cars, it will not prevent dockets from disappearing. At best, it will hang those who are too poor to afford legal representation."

Local News

•  Summary
•  Headlines
•  Forums
•  Email this story
•  Printer friendly




Local News Headlines Of The Last 48 Hours


•  'DRC refugee' arrested at airport
•  Keetmanshoop grapples with debt, at odds with Receiver
•  Namibia plagued by gender-based violence
•  'Struggle Kids' are happy campers
•  Teachers 'plot to kill' principal
•  Zero tolerance for road hogs
•  Nujoma Foundation raises N$300 000 at gala dinner
•  Young man sent to jail for killing older brother
•  Three die in lorry crash
•  Henties Bay 'in a mess'
•  High Court upholds labour-hire ban
•  Oshakati nervously eyes the sky
•  Shamil Dirk's graft case postponed again
•  ACC nabs Otavi Village Council CEO
•  Justice driver accused of looting
•  Job equity has improved
•  Ombudsman complains about Justice Ministry
•  New plan for Cuvelai Basin
•  APP postpones congress
•  Zim to ignore tribunal ruling
•  Immigration locks up SA journalist
•  Youth gets four years for rape
•  Swapo closes ranks

 

Advertise | About Us | Contact Us | Subscribe | Privacy | Terms Of Service | Guestbook

Material on this site copyright The Free Press Of Namibia (Pty) Ltd
PO Box 20783 - Windhoek - 42 John Meinert Street
Tel: +264 (61) 236970 - Fax: +264 (61) 233980

Back To Top