The European Union (EU) on Thursday, October 9, 2014 criticized the death sentence passed on 12 Nigerian soldiers for alleged mutiny, according to a report by Vanguard.
The union in a statement issued on the occasion of the World Day against Death Penalty condemned all death sentences especially after mass trials as was the case with the Nigerian soldiers.
The EU, headed by secretary-general, Mr. Thorbjørn Jagland, argued that execution had stopped in that region of the world for close to two decades.
The statement reads: “On the European and World Day against the Death Penalty, the European Union and the Council of Europe reaffirm their strong and absolute opposition to capital punishment in all cases and under all circumstances, and their commitment to its worldwide abolition.
“We are deeply concerned about setbacks in some countries, such as recent mass trials leading to a vast number of death sentences. No execution has taken place in our member states in the last 17 years.
The European Union and the Council of Europe welcome the fact that all Member States of the European Union have now ratified both Protocols 6 and 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights, and urge all other European States that have not yet done so to sign and ratify these instruments which aim at the abolition of the death penalty.”