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Gazans divided over death sentences

Gaza courts issued six death sentences in October, prompting concern among human rights groups for Gaza's judicial situation.
Palestinian families of those killed in violence in the Gaza Strip, hold posters reading in Arabic: "punishment for criminals" as they protest in support of execution outside a conference being held by non-governmental organisations on the occasion of the World Day Against the Death Penalty, in Gaza City, on October 9, 2013. The Gaza Strip's Islamist rulers Hamas hanged a prisoner today who had been convicted of murder, its interior ministry said, despite international calls for a halt to executions. Under
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GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — The General Prosecution Office in Gaza announced Oct. 30 that First Instance Courts in the provinces of Gaza, Deir el-Balah and Khan Yunis in the Gaza Strip issued six death sentences in October against people convicted of murder, bringing the total number of death sentences in Gaza during 2016 to 16.

Of these sentences, 12 were issued by military courts and four were rendered by civil courts. Three of them were executed in May 2016 without prior ratification by the Palestinian president in a clear violation of the Palestinian Basic Law of 2003. Article 109 of this law specifies that “a death sentence pronounced by any court may not be implemented unless ratified by the president of the Palestinian National Authority.”

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