Capital punishment in Menghe

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Capital punishment is a legal penalty in Menghe. It is available as a sentencing option for a variety of crimes, including murder, treason, and drug trafficking, depending on the severity of the offense. Most executions are carried out by shooting, with lethal injection emerging as an alternative in the 2000s before declining again after 2013.

Use of the death penalty peaked during the Disciplined Society Campaign of the late 1990s and early 2000s, when it was applied more liberally to cases of drug trafficking and corruption. Since then, the National Assembly has imposed greater restrictions on the sentencing process, and there are reports that the use of the death penalty has declined. Because the Menghean government does not publish figures on the annual number of executions, and treats this information as a state secret, there is some disagreement as to the strength of this trend.

History

A Communist security officer prepares to execute an occupation collaborator in Sunju, 1965. The 1967 Protocol on Capital Punishment forbade the filming and photography of executions.

The use of capital punishment in Menghe reaches back into antiquity, with unearthed bronze inscriptions dating from the 2nd century BCE recommending execution for a range of offenses. Menghean dynasties and the small warring states that accompanied them had a wide variety of execution measures, from death by a thousand cuts to dismemberment and decapitation. Especially heinous crimes could result in the execution of one's extended family, partly as collective punishment against a family line and partly to ensure that no relatives rose up to take revenge.

In 1308, the Sŏndŏk Emperor of the Yi dynasty issued a decree prohibiting all forms of capital punishment except beheading, which was to be carried out from behind the kneeling convict with a heavy sword. This move was a tacit nod to Chŏndo reformers, who believed that in order to be morally just, an execution must be "swift and merciful;" they regarded slow and agonizing executions, of the kind practiced beforehand, to be needlessly cruel. Nevertheless, death by a thousand cuts resurfaced under the Myŏn dynasty, where it was most infamously applied to Casaterran missionaries and merchants who violated the country's closed borders.

The State of Sinyi restored the "swift and merciful" requirement in 1870, adding that a bullet to the head or heart also met this standard. The Federal Republic of Menghe instituted the firing squad as the preferred method of execution, though beheading resurfaced in special circumstances under the Greater Menghean Empire and was a preferred tool of terrorism for nationalist guerillas during the Menghean War of Liberation. Beheading was formally outlawed under the Democratic People's Republic of Menghe, which relied on a mix of firing squads and individual executioners.

Crimes punishable by execution

Civilian law

As of January 2018, the following acts can be punished by execution, although there are no mandatory death sentences. Sentencing is based on a judgment that includes the severity of the offense, the defendant's criminal record, and whether the defendant shows any signs of remorse.

  • Murder, especially premeditated murder, murder of multiple people, and "exceptionally heinous or cruel methods of murder;"
  • Sexual abuse of a child or minor, or forcing a child to engage in prostitution or other sexual services;
  • Kidnapping which results in the death, rape, or grievous injury of the victim;
  • Plotting or taking part in an act of terrorism, including assassination of a Menghean politician or foreign politician on Menghean soil;
  • Organizing or inciting a civil disturbance which results in the death of civilian, police, or military personnel, or extensive damage to private or public property;
  • Producing, smuggling, or trafficking illicit drugs, if the amount exceeds 5 grams for Class I narcotics or 1 kilogram for Class II narcotics;
  • Smuggling, purchasing without license, or manufacturing without license firearms or explosives, with the intent of using them in a criminal or terrorist act or distributing them to criminal or terrorist elements;
  • Corruption, public or private, which results directly or indirectly in a loss of life, or which poses a grave risk to the lives of many;
  • Involvement in an act of genocide or crimes against humanity, either as a planner or a direct perpetrator;
  • Piracy, especially if it results in the injury or endangerment of passengers and crew; and
  • Hijacking or attempted hijacking of a high-speed train or civilian aircraft, with or without intent to engage in an act of terrorism.

The strict penalty against drug trafficking, imposed during the Disciplined Society Campaign, was amended in several reforms between 2006 and 2018 advising courts to account for outside factors when making their sentencing decision. Some unofficial outside studies have concluded that no individuals were sentenced to death for drug trafficking in 2015, 2016, and 2017, though as the Menghean government does not publish official execution statistics, these figures are disputed. By law, all ports of entry into Menghe, including international train stations, must carry signs in Anglian, Menghean, and the national language of the country of origin where relevant, warning that possession of narcotics is punishable by death; if certain controlled substances are legal in the country of origin, arrivals are given an opportunity to dispose of personal supplies in bins before passing through customs.

The use of the death penalty in cases of corruption is also somewhat unique to Menghe, though it is also practiced in Qusayn and Ummayah. During the 1990s, Menghean courts broadly interpreted the "grave risk to the lives of many" requirement, imposing death sentences on government officials who embezzled public funds in jurisdictions where citizens lived in extreme poverty. Since then, it has mainly been restricted to high-profile cases of regulatory negligence that resulted in a significant loss of life or widespread medical problems, such as the 2011 Yŏsu County chemical spill and the 2015 high-speed train derailment in Haenam Province. Several contractors and government officials associated with the Chimgu nuclear accident were also sentenced to death.

Internationally, the most controversial law in the list is the item permitting the death penalty for the ringleaders of civil disturbances. Prominent dissidents and human rights organizations contend that the Menghean regime has applied this law as part of a deliberate effort to restrict freedom of speech and freedom of assembly, and that most unofficial outside figures vastly underestimate the scale of its use. For its part, the Ministry of Justice maintains that the death penalty has not been applied in relation to a case of civil disturbance since 2009, a claim which dissidents have also disputed.

Military law

The Penal Code of the Menghean Armed Forces lists a number of additional offenses which are punishable by death. Unlike civilian offenses, these offenses are subject to trial before a military tribunal, and involve fewer rights and procedures for the defendant.

  • Treason, intent to commit treason, or incitement to treason;
  • Collaboration with enemy forces;
  • Espionage on behalf of a foreign entity or domestic terrorist movement, including the disclosure of state secrets to the public;
  • Malfeasance, refusal to carry out orders, or fabrication of orders;
  • Mutiny or incitement to mutiny;
  • Desertion;
  • Rape, theft, deliberate killing of civilians, and other acts classified as war crimes, with or without the orders of a superior officer;
  • Providing arms, food, or other supplies to hostile forces;
  • Sabotage of national infrastructure, including road and rail transportation, electrical infrastructure, and communication infrastructure, except when ordered to do so by a superior officer;
  • Sabotage, destruction, or abandonment of military equipment, except when ordered to do so by a superior officer; and
  • Theft of arms, ammunition, vehicles, and other controlled military items.

In peacetime, these regulations are only applied to active military personnel or reservists on training exercises. But during an armed conflict or other national crisis, the military can impose a state of emergency and apply several of these laws, such as those against sabotage and collaboration, to civilians. If a civilian crime in peacetime is deemed to pose a sufficient risk to national security, the accused may be turned over to a military tribunal instead of a civilian court.

All death sentences applied by Menghean military tribunals are carried out by firing squad, if possible at a secluded location or within an existing detention and execution facility. In wartime or times of emergency, this requirement can be relaxed.

Sentencing procedure

Menghe has a civil law legal system, meaning that while judges are permitted to make sentencing decisions based on the individual details of the case, they must follow the general guidelines laid down by the country's penal code.

If a local court decides to apply the death penalty, the case is then passed on to one of Menghe's eight regional High Courts, which review the case in greater detail in order to account for both the wording of the law and the facts surrounding the event. High courts have the power to replace a death sentence with a life sentence, or vice versa, and may reverse a guilty ruling altogether if new evidence comes to light or if the High Court finds "serious irregularities" in the lower court's decision. From 2009 onward, regional High Courts must also pass on a death sentence to the Supreme Court for approval, a measure intended to reduce the number of sentences handed out and impose additional caution.

At the conclusion of its ruling, the Supreme Court issues an execution date, which is known only by the convict and their immediate family. The accused has an opportunity to appeal the decision, but by law the appeal process cannot take longer than five years, and if the appeal court is unable to make a decision by that time a new, final execution date is scheduled. The accused can also request a pardon from the Supreme Council, but as of February 2018 there has been no recorded case in which the Supreme Council pardoned a convict on death row (the number of requests they received, if any, is unknown).

Execution procedure

Menghe's current execution procedure is spelled out in the National Protocol on Capital Punishment, which was passed in 1967 and amended in 1991, 2005, 2009, and 2013.

After being sentenced, convicts are taken to a special prison with execution facilities. Based on independent estimates, there are about 50 to 80 "execution-approved prisons" in Menghe, each one containing a mix of capital and non-capital inmates. Conditions at these facilities are usually harsher than those at other Menghean prisons, and inmates receive fewer rights. All death-row inmates are held in solitary confinement in a special wing of the prison, separate from the other prisoners.

By law, all civilian excutions in Menghe must be carried out in a windowless, soundproofed room within the detention facility; public execution is strictly prohibited, except during national emergencies where a soundproofed room is not available. No individuals other than the executioner and the convict are allowed in the room, and no cameras or recording devices can be present. Executions cannot be carried out on public holidays, nor on or near significant days in Menghean traditional religion. In Menghe's six semi-autonomous provinces, this prohibition also extends to holy days in the autonomous ethnic group's culture.

All executions are carried out by means of a bullet to the back of the head, again following the customary Chŏndo guideline that a swift death is the most merciful. In 2005 the law was amended to allow lethal injection, carried out in the same soundproofed execution room with a medical specialist present. In 2012, however, an unknown error in the composition of the chemical cocktail caused one convict, Wi U-sŏng, to remain conscious for fifteen minutes after the sedative was administered, a botched ordeal which prison officials leaked to the private press. Following public outrage over the case, the Ministry of Justice announced that it would transition back to an exclusive reliance on the bullet method.

According to anonymous accounts by former prison guards, the convict is handcuffed and blindfolded in his cell, then led to the execution room. In some cases he is strapped to a chair; in others, he is made to kneel, with his handcuffs shackled to the floor. In all cases the convict is placed with his back to the door, and his blindfold still on. After the guards have left the room, the executioner enters and closes the door. The executioner stands behind the convict, aims at the back of the brainstem, and fires. If the convict still shows signs of consciousness, the executioner fires again. After this, the executioner opens the door and a medical examiner is brought in to certify that the sentenced individual is clinically dead. Depending on the convict's religious preference, the remains are either cremated off-site or sent home for burial. Several families of death row convicts have reported receiving a bullet fee along with the deceased's remains.

Owing to the secretive nature of the Menghean execution system, little is known about the origin or identity of the executioners; even former prison guards know little about them, except that they are not part of the regular prison staff and only appear on execution days. It is generally believed that they are subordinate to the Ministry of Internal Security or Internal Intelligence Agency, and that they work as executioners on a full-time basis, rotating around the country to meet each prison's scheduled dates. By some estimates there may be as few as 20 in total, with each performing about a dozen executions a year. Ostensibly, they are kept anonymous and rotated between prisons to prevent retaliation by members of criminal organizations. There are rumors that the Ministry of Internal Security systematically recommends personnel who show no qualms about killing for the role.

Execution during the Disciplined Society Campaign

The use of capital punishment in the Socialist Republic of Menghe surged during the "disciplined society" campaign (Menghean: 규율 사회 / 規律社會, gyuyul sahoe), which Choe Sŭng-min launched in 1993. Organized as a response to heightened crime, smuggling, drug use, and corruption in the wake of Menghe's economic opening, this campaign consisted of a wide-ranging effort to instill military virtues among the citizenry, particularly hard work, self-sacrifice, and humble living conditions.

As part of this campaign, the Ministry of Justice extended the death penalty to "morally destructive crimes," a loosely defined category which included rape, drug trafficking, and corruption. It also allowed local courts to decide death-penalty cases without taking them to the regional High Court, which led to widespread reports of hasty sentences without appeal. Estimates for the number of executions steadily increased from 1994 onward, peaking in 1997 or 1999 before declining again after the Menghean Socialist Party transitioned to a more moderate tone. Some reports attest to the use of summary execution by local and national police forces, usually after arrest and detention but before a fair trial. While tacitly acknowledging the excesses of the overall campaign, the Ministry of Justice denies that summary executions became anything beyond an isolated occurrence.

Reform

Despite its controversy abroad, the death penalty enjoys widespread support in Menghe. In a nationally representative survey conducted in 2015, 82.4% of respondents said that they approved of Menghe using the death penalty, and only 6.7% believe the country should abolish the death penalty immediately. The Menghean Socialist Party and one of its coalition allies, the Menghean Labor Party, both support the use of capital punishment in their official platforms; the Menghean Social-Democratic Party is open to its abolition.

Nevertheless, the Ministry of Justice and the National Assembly have independently undertaken a number of reforms intended to reduce the use of the death sentence. Prominent examples include the requirement for Supreme Court approval, added in 2009; a procedure to extend the five-year appeal period "in extreme cases" in 2013; and, most recently, a law which abolished the use of the death penalty against drug trafficking for cases which began after January 1st, 2018. The Ministry of Justice also claims that lower-level courts have reduced the percentage of murder cases resulting in a death sentence.

Statistics

Because the Ministry of Justice does not publish any official figures on executions, and court and other proceedings related to death sentences are not generally open to the public, clear statistics on the number of death sentences carried out per year are difficult to estimate. Some independent organizations have attempted to produce estimates by contacting the families of convicts, or by searching for anonymous sources within detention centers. The Publicity Department of the Ministry of Justice maintains that most estimates by human rights organizations deliberately overestimate the number of executions.

Nevertheless, both official qualitative statements by the Ministry of Justice and outside estimates by most human rights NGOs suggest that the number of executions carried out each year has declined since its peak in the late 1990s, and there are signs of a steeper decline from 2015 onward.

According to Human Rights International, an NGO based in Septentrion, Menghe carried out 843 executions in 2017, compared with 987 in 2015. Estimates usually hovered around 1,000 to 1,500 between 2006 and 2015, with some signs of a gradual decline. Using 2015 census data, 843 executions suggests a per capita rate of 0.16 per 100,000 people.

See also