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Communist Vietnam's secret death penalty conveyor belt: How country trails only China and Iran for 'astonishing' number of executions

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Prisoners are dragged from their cells at 4am without warning to be given a lethal injection Vietnam's use of the death penalty has been thrust into the spotlight after a real estate tycoon was on Thursday sentenced to be executed in one of the biggest corruption cases in the country's history. Truong My Lan, a businesswoman who chaired a sprawling company that developed luxury apartments, hotels, offices and shopping malls, was arrested in 2022.

Hungary Will Not Re-Introduce Death Penalty Despite Growing Debate

Viktor Orban
Viktor Orban
Hungary has no plans to introduce the death penalty, "it is only a matter up for debate," Prime Minister Viktor Orban told European Parliament president Martin Schulz.

Orban and Schulz discussed the issue over the phone, cabinet chief Janos Lazar said. 

Viktor Orban also told European People's Party leader Joseph Daul and group leader Manfred Weber that a debate is ongoing in Hungary about the death penalty but European Union laws will be respected, Lazar added.

The cabinet chief repeated Viktor Orban's comments in connection with the recent brutal murder of a shop assistant in Kaposvar, stating that the introduction of the "3-strikes" law and real life sentences did not have sufficient effect to prevent crime and therefore the death penalty should be "kept on the agenda". "The unbelievable social outcry that has emerged in connection with serious crimes might not be heard in Brussels but it is heard in Budapest," Janos Lazar added. Hungary respects the EU legal system, but the EU in turn, as an important guardian of democracy, should not reject any debate that concerns its citizens, he said. Later PM Viktor Orban told commercial Echo TV that a decision on the death penalty was premature, but the debate on it should continue. He said the loud critical response from Brussels showed that "some people in Brussels do not want to allow debate."

Meanwhile the radical nationalist Jobbik party said it would initiate a day of debate in parliament about the reintroduction of capital punishment, party leader Gabor Vona said. 

Vona said international treaties do not ban the death penalty, but there are even some members of Jobbik who oppose it. He called the death penalty "justifiable," citing brutal murders as examples where it would be a just punishment. 

Concerning the planned free trade agreement between the EU and the US, he sharply criticised the government for "not raising hell" about the possibility of large US companies "ripping off Europe". 

Commenting on migration, he said Jobbik would support the government if it indeed took action in this area. He said Hungary needed no refugees at all but it should make preparations for granting safe haven to ethnic Hungarian asylum-seekers from Ukraine.

Source: Hungary Today, May 4, 2015

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