GHRA hails Justice Chang’s decision to commute death penalty

The Guyana Human Rights Association (GHRA) yesterday described Justice Ian Chang’s commutation of the death penalty of four prisoners to life imprisonment as “courageous”, and declared it “a welcome rejoinder to the evasion and  duplicity by popularity-pandering politicians over the years.”

According to the GHRA in a press release, Justice Chang’s verdict “spotlights the incompatibility of the medieval cruelty of the death penalty with evolving minimum humanitarian standards acceptable to the modern world.”

The human rights body noted  that “since the current ruling party came to power in 1992, it has made no bones about its preference for reviving hanging. The only restraint to ending the moratorium introduced by President Hoyte in 1990, following the hanging of the innocent Sylvester Sturge, has been  growing worldwide revulsion at this practice, continuously communicated to the Government by the international community.”

The GHRA also observed that this instinct for revenge on the part of the ruling party, as no other rationale has been advanced for retaining the practice,  has persisted despite the decaying quality of the local courts.

In that light, the human rights body pointed out that in the same week that Justice Chang ordered commutation, the Director of Public Prosecutions lamented the fact that 5 of 234 cases before the High Court had been completed in the last Assizes.

Since the death penalty is irrevocable, the GHRA contended, any system of justice that retains it as a sentencing option is claiming there is no possibility of error.

“Rather than prolong such illusions of perfection, legislators should be addressing the fundamental crisis in the High Court.”

The GHRA also argued that beneath the persistent controversy over   the death penalty, corporal punishment and sexual orientation, is a vacuum of principle in the shaping of national policy.
“The concept of reviewing ethical standards to maintain a civilized society is viewed by the political class in general, as weakness. As a society we seem to fear being civilized. Guyana languishes in the Americas region at the bottom of both development indicators as well as those with the most reactionary legislation, in the three areas referred to.”

Moreover, for a society born out of violence and coercion, the GHRA said, the lesson is taking a long time to learn that repudiating cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment is as vital to development as economic progress.

According to the human rights body, the only course of action, if the concept of justice means anything at all, is that the Minister of Home Affairs view Justice Chang’s judgment as a precedent for reviewing commutation of sentences of all of those prisoners on death row.

And the longest serving occupants have all served life sentences, the GHRA added.