Pakistan ends capital punishment for drug trafficking convicts
KARACHI, Pakistan (AA): Pakistan’s parliament has approved new anti-narcotics legislation, removing capital punishment for drug trafficking convicts.
“Anti-narcotics bill passed, removing capital punishment,” Commerce Minister Syed Naveed Qamar tweeted.
The legislation “Control of Narcotics Substances Act, 2023” was passed during a joint session of the lower house – the National Assembly – and the upper house – the Senate – in the capital Islamabad, and will come into force at once.
The maximum punishment, according to the fresh legislation, for a convict of a drug-related crime will be life imprisonment, whereas the minimum will be a six-month jail term.
Under pressure from secular Western nations and human rights organizations, Pakistan imposed a ban on capital punishment in 2008 in exchange for trade incentives from the EU.
The Muslim country where the majority follows traditional conservative Islam has always upheld capital punishment by execution, which is stipulated by Islamic law for some crimes of a serious nature.
Islamic scholars believe the existence of capital punishment in society acts as an effective deterrent to lawlessness and crimes.
However, the six-year ban on capital punishment was lifted under public pressure after a gun-and-bomb attack on an army school in northwestern Peshawar city in December 2014, which killed over 140 people, mostly students.
Since then, some 518 convicts have been executed.
Predictably, human rights groups and the EU have condemned the lifting of the ban on capital punishment, saying it would not add to the government’s efforts to eliminate violence and crime.
Currently, there are more than 4,000 death-row convicts across Pakistan, according to the local media.
In February 2021, Pakistan’s Supreme Court, in a landmark judgment, ruled that prisoners with serious mental health problems cannot be executed for their crimes.
Drug abuse, especially among the youth, is becoming a scourge for the country, with drug traffickers and dealers making fortunes through the illegal trade, targeting the young and vulnerable. The lifting of capital punishment for drug smuggling is likely to worsen the problem of drug addiction among Pakistani youth.