BBC NEWS (You should be able to find the AUDIO later on BBC World News soon. Listen out for an interview with Pierce Bannister, Amnesty UK death pen. expert who was a big help staying connected with Journey folk while we had the privilege of having Edward Mpagi of Uganda with us on the Texas Journey of Hope. (2007 Journey - one year before Montana Journey) Connie
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Death penalty 'closer to demise'
The world is moving nearer to ending the use of capital punishment, Amnesty International says, despite its latest report revealing a mixed picture.
In its annual survey the group says 2,390 people were put to death in 2008, up from 1,252 in 2007. And 8,864 were sentenced to death, up from 3,347.
Of 25 nations using the death penalty in 2008, China was the most prolific.
But Amnesty said it was encouraging that just 59 nations retained the death penalty and so few actually used it.
The group's secretary general, Irene Khan, said such punishments as beheading, stoning and electrocution "have no place in the 21st Century".
Despite the rise in executions during 2008, she said there were reasons to be optimistic.
"The good news is that executions are only carried out by a small number of countries, which shows that we are moving closer to a death-penalty free world," she said.
'Worrying instances'
The group highlighted decisions by Argentina and Uzbekistan to abolish the death penalty in 2008.
And the fact that Belarus was the only European nation to carry out executions was also interpreted positively.
But Ms Khan said the "bad news" in the report, entitled Death Sentences and Executions in 2008, was that hundreds of people continued to suffer.
The report said China used lethal injection and shooting to execute at least 1,718 people.
China executes more people than any other nation
But Beijing does not publish data on the death penalty.
Of the top-six countries in Amnesty's list, only the US (37) publishes statistics on the penalty's use.
The figures for the others are estimates based on what Amnesty has verified through media reports, rights groups and official statements.
Other groups frequently give much higher figures.
The other worst-offending nations on the list are Iran (346), Saudi Arabia (102), Pakistan (36) and Iraq (34).
Amnesty also highlighted "worrying instances" of some nations bucking a long-term trend away from the death penalty.
St Kitts and Nevis carried out the first execution in the Caribbean for five years, the group's report said.
And Liberia introduced capital punishment for robbery, terrorism and hijacking.
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Published: 2009/03/24 01:01:14 GMT
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