UK commends Ghana for abolishing death penalty

The Death Penalty Project UK has praised Speaker Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, and Parliament for their crucial roles in eliminating the death penalty from Ghana’s laws.

On July 25th, the Criminal and Other Offenses (Amendment) Bill, 2022, and Armed Forces (Amendment) Bill, 2022, were passed by  Parliament, replacing the death penalty with life imprisonment.

These groundbreaking amendments were proposed by Francis-Xavier Sosu, a Human Rights and Public Interest Lawyer and Member of Parliament for Madina Constituency.

This move has been globally applauded by Human Rights activists.

Prior to the amendments, the proposal had received widespread support from key stakeholders including the President of the Republic of Ghana, the Chief Justice and Justices of the Supreme Court, The Ghana Armed Forces, the Police and Prison Services, Religious Organisations, Civil Society Organisations, Commonwealth Parliamentary Association, and the Diplomatic Community.

During a visit to Parliament, Executive Director of the Death Penalty Project UK, Saul Lehrfreund, said “As a Project, we will like to thank the Parliament of Ghana and especially Rt. Hon. Speaker for his historic leadership and guidance without which Parliament may not have been able to take these bold steps.”

The passage of the Bills form part of efforts by the 8th Parliament to ensure the realization of a free, open, prosperous, inclusive and secure society, where individual rights and freedoms and the dignity of All persons are truly respected and guaranteed as enshrined in Article 15 of the 1992 Constitution.

Following passage of the Bills, Ghana has now become the 29th African country to abolish the death Penalty from its statute books for ordinary offenses following neighbours including Sierra Leone, Zambia, Benin, Ivory Coast, Senegal, Togo, Burkina Faso, Chad and Equatorial Guinea, among others.

Death Penalty UKParliamentSpeaker Alban Bagbin