Death
row is not knowing when
Inmates
wake up every day wondering if it's their last
By KAHO
SHIMIZU
Staff
writer
It is
not uncommon in Japan for people convicted of brutal, often
notorious, murders to be sentenced to hang.
But the public knows little about what lies in store for
death-row inmates after their sentences are finalized,
while the inmates themselves never know from then on which
day will be their last. They thus bear the stress of having
to face the gallows without notice -- and without being
afforded the opportunity to bid anyone farewell.
This scenario has prompted experts to raise questions about
their treatment.
"Conditions on death row are very harsh," the mother of a
man facing execution at Tokyo Detention House told an
international conference on capital punishment in Tokyo
earlier this year.
The mother, who declined to be named, said her son's
sentence was finalized by the Supreme Court last year after
10 years of trial at the district, high and top court
levels.
Like other death-row inmates, her son is in solitary
confinement, she said.
He was convicted of murdering a family of four during a
burglary in Ichikawa, Chiba Prefecture, in 1992, when he
was a minor.
The mother said his contact with the outside world has been
more restricted since his sentence was finalized.
Death-row convicts are only allowed to meet close relatives
and attorneys working on an appeal -- with guards present.
Every letter written or received by convicts is screened by
authorities.
According to the inmate's mother, if any part of a letter
written by her son is deemed inappropriate, he is forced to
rewrite that portion, often to the point that the original
meaning is lost.
The Japan Federation of Bar Associations said such limits
on communication hinder a convict's pursuit of an appeal or
retrial.
And then there is the agony of not knowing when the fateful
day will come.
"Every time I visit my son, I think today might be the last
time I see him," the mother said, noting that neither the
family, the lawyer nor the convict will be notified in
advance of the execution day. "It's like the state is
testing my son's patience, forcing him to lose control and
go mad."
Justice Ministry officials claim, however, there is no
other choice.
"Besides physically restraining convicts so they cannot
escape, an important goal in confining them is to make them
accept the sentence and face their own death calmly," said
Jun Aoyama of the ministry's Corrections Bureau.
"But prisoners awaiting execution are always in a
psychologically unstable state, and every little thing can
cause trouble," he added.
Every regulation restricting the prisoners' communications
helps keep their mental state steady, he said.
"As long as the country sanctions capital punishment, it is
our duty to make sure that the criminals atone for their
crime."
The
hangman's stress
The
brutality of executions goes beyond just the killing of
inmates, according to Social Democratic Party lawmaker
Reiko Oshima, who is a member of a nonpartisan group of
Diet members opposed to capital punishment.
Prison officers also bear a psychological burden when they
carry out the sentence, she said.
"Article 36 of the Constitution stipulates that the
infliction of torture by any public officer and cruel
punishment is forbidden," she said, noting it is
unconstitutional for the government to require that prison
officers carry out executions.
What surprised her most is that neither recruitment
advertisements nor internal rules for prison officers
stipulate that their duties include carrying out
executions.
Prison guard recruitment ads in fact only show the bright
side of their job and make no mention of the gallows.
Internal regulations also decline to mention that carrying
out executions is one of a prison guard's duties.
The bar federation said there are reports about wardens
suffering psychological disorders after witnessing or
carrying out hangings.
Lawyer Yoshihiro Yasuda, a leading campaigner against
capital punishment, said, "I have heard of a former prison
officer bursting into tears as he related his experience of
witnessing executions."
Justice Ministry gag orders keep them from relating such
horrors to the public, he added.
"This kind of business is not something that you do
openly," ministry official Aoyama said.
"They (prison officers) may have various feelings (about
carrying out executions), but everyone in the prison knows
that executions are a part of their job."
The
Japan Times: Thursday, Oct. 3, 2002
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