Introduction The most severe punishment the country can use is the death penalty and is also called the death penalty. This is a state-to-individual enforcement procedure as a penalty for criminal acts, the death penalty depends on the type of criminal offense in the legal system and the country's penal code. Throughout history, the death penalty has been used as deterrence against similar crime, and all countries use the death penalty to punish crimes of high national crime rates and offenders.
Of the countries listed as "very high" in the Human Development Index, the eight countries of the United States, Japan, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain and Taiwan enforce the death penalty. There are timeouts in Korea and Russia. Qatar and Brunei were actually postponed. In Israel and Chile it can only be used for crimes committed during the war. In Africa, capital punishment is applied in several countries. Chad abolished the death penalty in 2014, but again in 2015 it used it for act of terrorism. Botswana and Nigeria are examples of countries still executing people. Recently, Burkina Faso abolished capital punishment in 2018. In 2018, Gambia announced the first step to pause execution.
Saudi Arabia is one of the few countries in the world with official verdict of court order, corporal punishment in the courtroom, official whipping, whipping, birch, binding and binding. In Saudi Arabia penalties of judicial companies are under Islamic Sharia such as whaling of minor crimes such as alcoholism and "sexual acts" and cutting off more serious crimes such as robbery. The country also enforces the death penalty including decimation of public execution. This is a strict interpretation of Islamic law, punishment for rapists, murderers, armed robbers. In 2005, 191 people were executed, 38 people were executed in 2006, in 2007 they were executed and 153 people were executed (International, 2009).
Throughout the world history, people have given incredible support to the use of the death penalty in many societies and religions. In ancient Greek society, Socrates was executed to not believe in God, and in the 1970s Saudi Arabia was virgin for adultery. Historically, the death penalty is an acceptable method of punishment, and the use of the death penalty has been proven to be nothing illegal by the state. The Constitution is the basis of our law and does not include the abolition of capital punishment and illegal capital punishment. Instead, it requires that "only criminal can be applied to the seriousness of crime". When a crime is killed it will be the basis of this right to punish in the words of the Constitution. But the more powerful words of the constitution on this subject come from the eighth amendment, as well as the phrase of cruel and unusual punishment. Many people!