Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Since there is some lively discussion this afternoon
of the death penalty, let me do what we forbore from
doing on February 28 when the European Union first
raised the issue, which is to address this particular
case in the state of Georgia. As was just pointed out,
indeed Mr. Tracy Housel was executed on Tuesday night.
He was tried and convicted of the murder of a woman
named Jean Drew.
In the earlier intervention to which the European
Union has just alluded, Mr. Housel was reported to be
suffering from a mental disorder. I simply like to note
that a pre-trial report found that Mr. Housel was
"competent and suffered from no major mental illness".
This was in fact corroborated by a previous
psychological report from the State of California
assessing Mr. Housel's intelligence and psychological
state.
Mr. Chairman, allow me to point out that
international law does not prohibit use of the death
penalty. Rather it limits the death penalty to the most
serious crimes and requires stringent due process
safeguards. Each state, therefore, has the right to
decide through its own democratic processes whether or
not its domestic laws should allow capital punishment in
accordance with international law. In the case of the
United States, currently 38 of our 50 states, plus the
United States Federal Government, provide for the use of
the death penalty. The United States Supreme Court has
upheld this use of the death penalty for the most
serious crimes provided that its use is in accordance
with stringent procedural safeguards as guaranteed by
the United States Constitution and by relevant state
constitutions.
Thank you very
much.