Three men, three extraordinary stories. One spent 18 years in prison in Uganda, convicted for murdering a neighbour later found to be alive.
Another survived 34 years facing execution in Japan. The third became the 100th prisoner on death row to be found innocent and freed in the United States.
Amnesty International brought the men together in New York before a hearing of the human rights committee of the United Nations on Thursday that called for a moratorium on executions around the world as a first step towards abolishing the death penalty. It is the ultimate argument, the campaign believes — the testimony of individuals who managed to survive the system, but who came close to being killed despite their innocence.
Venezuela became the first country to remove the death penalty in 1853, and the abolition movement has grown, with 133 states as members. Britain abolished the penalty in 1967.
Last year 1 591 people were put to death in 25 nations, but 91% of those were executed in six countries: China, Iran, Pakistan, Iraq, Sudan and the US. China is known to have executed more than 1 000 prisoners last year, but the real figure may be closer to 8 000.
Twelve US states put 53 people to death last year, but the practice has fallen to its lowest level in a decade thanks to the Supreme Court’s decision to hear arguments about the humanity of the lethal injection method next year.
The UN resolution has no power to enforce a moratorium, but it is seen as a chance to tip countries teetering on abolition.
Amnesty’s death row expert, Piers Bannister, said the men’s stories ”provide graphic evidence that the death penalty is administered by flawed systems that put innocent people at risk”.
Ray Krone
In 2002 Ray Krone became the 100th death row prisoner to be freed in the US. He was your model citizen at the time of his arrest on New Year’s Eve, 1991, aged 35. He had served in the US Air Force for six years and had a spotless criminal record. ”I was the kind of guy who, if you had broken down in your car in the middle of the night, you could call up and I would come.”
Then it all went wrong. A barmaid was stabbed to death in the CBS Lounge where he used to drink near his home in Phoenix, Arizona. Someone said he had been having a relationship with the woman, which was not true, and a medical examiner matched his teeth to a bite mark found on the victim’s arm. He was put on death row after a trial lasting barely three days.
For the first few months he was in despair. But over time he came to realise that if he was to fight the system he had to understand how it worked. He managed to get hold of legal books and study, and he kept pressing his case with the prison authorities. In 2001 the state of Arizona made it easier for prisoners to gain access to DNA testing, and when the victim’s clothing was analysed, police databases threw up the name of a convicted sex offender who had been on parole at the time of the murder and staying at his mother’s house next to the CBS Lounge. Krone was released the following year.
Before his arrest he supported the death penalty. ”I saw it as the end of the line, the just deserts for those who commit heinous crimes,” he says. Now he campaigns against it. ”If they can do it to me, they can do it to anybody.”
Edward Edmary Mpagi
Mpagi spent 18 years on death row in Uganda. The hardest moments were when fellow inmates were taken away from their cells, leaving him to wonder if it would be his turn next. He counted 52 men who were taken for execution, often in batches of 10 or 11 at a time.
Then the prison guards would take an inmate away. The other prisoners would shout ”So-and-so is going!” and the condemned man would cry: ”I am going! I am going to meet my Lord!” Then there would be a three-day period while the condemned men were allowed to prepare themselves for death and take their last rites from a priest. Mpagi would hear the men singing to keep up their spirits.
At the end of the three days, he would hear them being led to the execution chamber, and then the thud of the body as it fell from the gallows.
Finally, the sound of nails being knocked into coffins. Only then, when all the men had been hanged, would he be able to relax. ”You think, ‘It could be me. Maybe this time I am going’. Only when the exercise is over does your heart come back. Until then, there is great fear.”
He was arrested, aged 27, in 1981 and sentenced to death the next year for the murder of a neighbour in Masaka. Mpagi thought he saw the dead man, George William Wandyaka, standing at the back of the court during the trial.
A few years later, further sightings were made of the man. It transpired that Wandyaka’s parents had carried a grudge against Mpagi’s parents, and had staged the murder to hurt them.
In 1989, the authorities in Masaka confirmed that Wandyaka was alive, though Mpagi remained on death row for a further 11 years. Since coming off death row he has dedicated himself to campaigning against executions. A devout Christian, he says he has forgiven all those involved with what happened to him, even Wandyaka who died in 2002. — Â