U.S. Bishops react to revival
of federal death penalty
A priest speaking at a rally against the death penalty (file photo) |
The Catholic Bishops of the United States express concern
over the U.S. Justice Department’s announcement scheduling the executions of
five people on death row.
By Vatican News
The last time the U.S. federal government executed someone
was 16 years ago. Over the past two decades, an informal moratorium on the
death penalty at the national level in the United States has seen the annual
number of death sentences decrease by 85%.
Justice Department announcement
On Friday, U.S. Attorney General William Barr, announced
that five death-row inmates would be executed by lethal injection within the
next six months. “We owe it to the victims and their families to carry forward
the sentence imposed by our justice system”, he said.
Catholic Bishops’ reaction
The Chairman of the USCCB Committee on Domestic Justice and
Human Development is Bishop Frank Dewane of Florida. In a statement reacting to
Mr Barr’s decision, he said the Catholic Bishops of the United States are
“deeply concerned” by the move and urge the Trump Administration to reconsider.
Pope Francis and the death penalty
“In 2015 Pope Francis, echoing the views of his
predecessors, called for ‘the global abolition of the death penalty’”, reads
the statement. At that time, the Pope added that a “just and necessary
punishment must never exclude the dimension of hope and the goal of
rehabilitation”.
In August last year, Pope Francis made a formal
change to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, declaring the death
penalty to be “inadmissible” and describing it as “an attack on the
inviolability and dignity of the person”.
U.S. Catholic Bishops and the death penalty
In 2005, the United States Catholic Bishops Conference
issued a statement echoing the position of the popes and the catechism, and
entitled “A
Culture of Life and the Penalty of Death”. “In light of these long held and
strongly maintained positions”, says Bishop Dewane, “I am deeply concerned by
the announcement of the United States Justice Department that it will once
again turn, after many years, to the death penalty as a form of punishment, and
urge that these federal officials be moved by God’s love, which is stronger
than death, and abandon the announced plans for executions”.
According to Amnesty International, 170 countries have
already abolished the death penalty in law or in practice, while Pope Francis
continues to call for the Church to work “with determination for its abolition
worldwide”.
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