LOCKED UP AND FORGOTTEN: THE NEED TO ABOLISH THE DEATH PENALTY IN GHANA

Death sentences in Ghana continue to be imposed. At the end of 2016, 148 people were on death row, all sentenced to death for murder. While the last executions were carried out in July 1993, there is no official moratorium on executions in Ghana. Research carried out by Amnesty International in Ghana has highlighted concerns with the use of the death penalty, access to fair trial rights and poor prison conditions. Amnesty International calls on the Ghanaian authorities to commute the death sentences of all people on death row and to abolish the death penalty for all crimes.

Click here to read the report.

This report was originally published on amnesty.org

About Sabrina Tucci

I am a human rights professional currently working for Amnesty International where I specialized on business and human rights, the death penalty and refugees and migrants’ rights.
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