Monday, June 25, 2001

HOLY SEE STATEMENT AT FIRST WORLD CONGRESS ON DEATH PENALTY


VATICAN CITY, JUN 23, 2001 (VIS) - The First World Congress on the Death Penalty was held in Strasbourg, France, on June 21 and 22. The Holy See participated with a delegation led by Msgr. Paul Gallagher, special envoy to the Council of Europe who presented a Holy See declaration on the death penalty on June 21. That statement, released June 23, follows in its entirety:

"The Holy See has consistently sought the abolition of the death penalty and His Holiness Pope John Paul II has personally and indiscriminately appealed on numerous occasions in order that such sentences should be commuted to a lesser punishment, which may offer time and incentive for the reform of the guilty, hope to the innocent and safeguard the well-being of civil society itself and of those individuals who through no choice of theirs have become deeply involved in the fate of those condemned to death.

"The Pope had most earnestly hoped and prayed that a worldwide moratorium might have been among the spiritual and moral benefits of the Great Jubilee which he proclaimed for the Year 2000, so that the dawn of the Third Millennium would have been remembered forever as the pivotal moment in history when the community of nations finally recognized that it now possesses the means to defend itself without recourse to punishments which are 'cruel and unnecessary'. This hope remains strong but it is unfulfilled and yet there is encouragement in the growing awareness that 'it is time to abolish the death penalty'.

"It is surely more necessary than ever that the inalienable dignity of human life be universally respected and recognized for its immeasurable value. The Holy See has engaged itself in the pursuit of the abolition of capital punishment as an integral part of the defense of human life at every stage of its development and does so in defiance of an assertion of a culture of death.

"Where the death penalty is a sign of desperation, civil society is invited to assert its belief in a justice that salvages hope from the ruins of the evils which stalk our world. The universal abolition of the death penalty would be a courageous reaffirmation of the belief that humankind can be successful in dealing with criminality and of our refusal to succumb to despair before such forces, and as such it would regenerate new hope in our very humanity."

DELSS;DEATH PENALTY;...;STRASBOURG; GALLAGHER;VIS;20010625;Word: 400;

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