Jan 18, 2010

A Caveat In My Anti-Death Penalty Position

My position in opposition to the death penalty arrived at after long and tortured reasoning is not based upon moral grounds but on enlightened self-interest, albeit broadly drawn. Since my objection to capital punishment is not on moral grounds, it is not absolute.

This case of Chemical Ali' (to be hanged within days) causes me to enter a caveat: where penal custody for life (a life sentence) is not secure, enabled or guaranteed, taking a dude out back and shooting him is permissible.

I take no position on Ali Hassan al-Majid's guilt or innocence. He's been sentenced (for the fourth time) to death by Iraq's high criminal court for ordering slaughter of Kurds in 1988. You can read about details here and elsewhere on the 'Net. His (relative) guilt may be beyond question, but it also beside the question.

So, I'm not making this about Chemical Ali'; I just consider him as a poster boy.

The question is, how can his re-release into society be definitively prevented. As the Guardian points out,
...the Guardian has learned that the US detention centre in which Majid has been held since being captured six years ago will continue to house prisoners until August, despite being scheduled to close on 31 December as part of a much-heralded security agreement between Washington and Baghdad. The status of forces agreement signed between both states had flagged the ­closure of the Camp Cropper detention centre as a milestone of security progress.
In the political disorder that follows post-Bush Iraq, there is no insurance this poster boy won't somehow gain his release.

Poster Boys like him are captured and tried all over the world, every day. Some can be sent to the Hague. But not all.

Of course, if Guantanamo didn't have to be closed to satisfy certain symbolic purposes; if it could be internationalized under United Nations auspices, Gitmo could serve as another secure International House of Pancakes Prisoners.

(But that's another story.)

So, If Chemical Ali' is guilty of the heinous acts of which he is accused, I'll pass on his case.

9 comments:

Unknown said...

I grasp you point, Vig. I do wonder that many 'war criminals' will find new freedom after American forces release the resposibility or custody of imprisoned criminals in Iraq... as its happened before, in other wars. Yes?
Including Chemical Ali, I am not in favor of the death penalty. :-)

Vigilante said...

I respect the moral opposition to the death penalty, Ms Barry. It's very respectable.

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Vigilante said...

Just pausing to acknowledge that the dude was hung today.

Kentucky Rain said...

Where has this blog been? Now you have THREE blogs Vigil or am I missing a couple. I am opposed to the DP but not on moral grounds. I consider death too swift for these scumbags and I believe life imprisonment, natural life, without chance of parole, to be a far more punishing experience, and it is also cheaper than executing a shitball.

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