In brief
Whatever form it takes – hanging, lethal injection, beheading, stoning or electrocution – the death penalty is a violent punishment that has no place in today’s criminal justice system.
Read MoreThe issue in depth
When Amnesty started campaigning against the death penalty back in 1977, only 16 countries had abolished it. As of December 2023, 112 countries have abolished the death penalty for all crimes and another 23 countries no longer perform executions.
Unfortunately while the abolitionist movement has made significant progress over that time, the countries that still execute are doing so at alarming rates.
Executions don’t deter criminals
There’s no scientific evidence to show that the death penalty deters crime any more than other punishments.
Crime figures from abolitionist countries show that ending the death penalty is not followed by a spike in crime. In fact, in Canada the homicide rate in 2015 is almost half that in 1976, the year the death penalty was abolished there.
Innocents awaiting execution
The death penalty is irreversible. All legal systems make mistakes, and so as long as the death penalty exists, innocent people will be executed.
In the USA, 151 people have been released from death rows since 1973 due to evidence of their wrongful convictions. Some of them had spent many years on death row and had come close to being executed.
Powerless and poor
Research has shown that people have been sentenced to death after being tortured into ‘confessing’ to crimes, and after unfair or politically-motivated trials.
The death penalty is often used disproportionately against the poor, powerless and marginalised, or by repressive governments to eliminate or silence dissent.
Children facing the death penalty
International human rights treaties prohibit courts sentencing to death or executing anyone who was under the age of 18 at the time the crime was committed. But a small number of countries continue to execute child offenders.
We know of nine countries since 1990 that have executed prisoners who were under 18 at the time the crime was committed – China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, the United States of America and Yemen. Several of these countries have since changed their laws to exclude the practice.
Australia’s role in the cause
In the wake of 2015’s executions in Indonesia, Amnesty and a number of human rights organisations released a joint paper, which outlined a number of steps the Australian government should take to effectively campaign against the death penalty worldwide. Thousands of Amnesty supporters signed a petition echoing these calls.
Following our petition, the Australian government asked the Parliament to launch an inquiry into what Australia could do in the worldwide campaign against the death penalty. In May 2016, the Parliamentary Committee released its report, A world without the death penalty – Australian’s Advocacy for the Abolition of the Death Penalty, containing a number of recommendations to the Australian government – many of which Amnesty has been calling for.
Importantly, the report called for changes to the way the Australian Federal Police (AFP) shares information with its international counterparts. The Committee recommends that for drug-related crimes, the AFP should never share information unless they’ve received a commitment that the death penalty won’t be pursued.
The report also called on Australia to play a leading role at the United Nations in advocating for worldwide abolition, and for Australia to directly pressure countries which still practice capital punishment.
In March 2017, the Australian government provided its response to the recommendations of the report. The response made some positive steps, but it also contained setbacks. While the Australian government committed to a whole of government strategy of advocating against the death penalty, it rejected the recommendations related to when law enforcement can share information on drug-related crimes. Had they been followed, these recommendations would have closed the door on another Bali 9-type situation ever occurring again.
CloseWho’s responsible?
16 countries across the world are known to have carried out executions in 2023
Read MoreOutside China, 90% of the global executions in 2023 were carried out by Iran (75%) and Saudi Arabia (15%)
According to Amnesty’s latest annual report, a total of 1,153 people were known to have been executed across 16 countries in 2023 — this is a rise of 31% (270) since 2022.
This spike in executions doesn’t include the thousands believed to have been carried out in China last year. In addition, Amnesty International couldn’t determine credible minimum figures for executions carried out in North Korea and Viet Nam, countries believed to continue to punish people by death extensively.
This spike in executions was led by countries in the Middle East and North Africa.
The world’s top executioners in 2023
- China: 1000’s of people executed
- Iran: 853 people executed
- Saudi Arabia: 172 people executed
- Somalia: 38 people executed
- USA: 24 people executed
*Country names listed reflect nomenclature in May 2024.
**This map indicates the general locations of boundaries and jurisdictions and should not be interpreted as Amnesty International’s view on disputed territories.
CloseWhat we’re asking
The fight for a world without the death penalty must continue. Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases without exception.
Read MoreThe road to abolition
What Amnesty is calling for
- Countries that still use the death penalty to immediately halt all executions
- Countries that have stopped executing people to permanently remove this punishment for all crimes
- All death sentences to be commuted to prison sentences.
The road so far
In 1977, when Amnesty International started campaigning against the death penalty, only 112 countries had abolished it. Now, there are 112 countries who have abolished it from their laws, and another 23 counties who no longer perform executions and are making positive step towards full abolition.
The trend towards abolition remains strong but we must continue to pressure governments in countries where the death penalty still exists, until universal abolition is realised.
Will you join us?
CloseWhat's the latest
According to Amnesty International's latest annual report, the lowest number of countries on record carried out the highest number of known executions in close to a decade.
Read MoreDeath sentences and executions in 2023
According to Amnesty’s latest annual report, the lowest number of countries on record carried out the highest number of known executions in close to a decade.
In 2023, there were a recorded 1,153 executions in 16 countries – a 31% increase from 883 recorded in 2022 – including a significant increase in executions for drug-related offences.
Key findings
- 16 countries known to have carried out executions
- The surge in recorded executions was largely attributable to an alarming spike in executions for drug-related offences in Iran
- Spike in executions does not include the thousands believed to have been carried out in China, which remained the world’s lead executioner; and North Korea and Viet Nam, countries believed to continue to carry out executions extensively, but with no available data.
- Secrecy and control of information on the death penalty continued to be an indicator of the determination of governments of some executing countries to use this punishment as a tool to instil fear and display the power of state institutions.
- In the month of July, the repeal of the death penalty for drug-related offences
in Pakistan and the abolition of the mandatory death penalty in Malaysia became effective; and the Parliament of Ghana voted in favour of two bills that would remove the death penalty from the criminal and military codes
Australia and the Asia Pacific region
In Asia-Pacific, seven countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, China, Myanmar, North Korea, Singapore and Vietnam) are known to have carried out executions in 2023. It’s the same as 2022, except for Japan, which didn’t carry out any execution in 2023.
“As a global leader in the fight against the death penalty, Australia must bring a new level of commitment and focus, especially in the Asia Pacific region and towards countries resuming and increasing executions.”
— Rose Kulak, Amnesty International Australia Campaigner
CloseGlobal abolition in reach
Despite tragic numbers in 2023, there was also progress. Each and every day we come closer to a world without the death penalty.
Read MoreSlowly but steadily, consensus is building towards ending the use of the death penalty
The record figures in 2023 from our latest annual report should act as a warning that it’s not yet time to let off pressure.
Despite a tragic number of executions recorded globally, there was also progress. The world continued to move away from the death penalty and only a minority of countries – that are increasingly becoming isolated – actively used the punishment.
The death penalty is currently abolished in more than half of the world – 112 countries have abolished it from their laws and another 23 counties no longer perform executions.
“With 125 UN member states — more than ever before — calling for a moratorium on executions, Amnesty International has never felt more hopeful that this abhorrent punishment can and will be relegated to the annals of history. But 2023’s tragic figures remind us that we can’t rest on our laurels. We will continue to campaign until the death penalty is abolished across the globe.”
— Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General
We must continue the momentum. Together, we can end the death penalty everywhere.
CloseTake Action Now
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