Read Editorial with D2G – Ep CXXXVIII

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POVERTY AND THE DEATH ROW

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 D2G wears no responsibility of the views published here by the respective Author. This Editorial is used here for Study Purpose. Students are advised to learn the word-meaning, The Art of Writing Skills and understand the crux of this Editorial.
MEANINGS are given in BOLD and ITALIC

Opposition to the death penalty is often rooted in arguments about its irreversibility, its essential cruelty, the possibility of error and the false sense of justice in doing unto convicted murderers what they had done to their victims. In the Indian context, politics surrounding the prisoners’ ethnic origin or linguistic (Linguistics is the study of the way in which language works – भाषाई) affinity (If you have an affinity with someone or something, you feel that you are similar to them or that you know and understand them very well – आत्मीयता) is often the basis for pleas for clemency (If someone is granted clemency, they are punished less severely than they could be – दया). Rarely is a more compelling reason invoked: the possibility of an offender’s economic background, educational level, social status or religious identity working against his interests in legal proceedings.

A report released on Friday by the National Law University, Delhi, on the working of the death penalty in India provides validation and proof for something that those familiar with administration of justice knew all along: that most of those sentenced to death in the country are poor and uneducated; and many belong to religious minorities. In addition, a revealing number is that as many as 241 out of 385 death row convicts were first-time offenders. Some may have been juveniles (A juvenile is a child or young person who is not yet old enough to be regarded as an adult – किशोर) when they committed capital offences, but lacked the documentation to prove their age. Against the salutary (A salutary experience is good for you, even though it may seem difficult or unpleasant at first – लाभदायक) principle that those too young and too old be spared the death sentence, 54 death row convicts whose age was available were between 18 and 21 at the time of the offence, and seven had crossed 60 years of age. An average prisoner awaiting execution is likely to be from a religious minority, a Dalit caste, a backward class, or from an economically vulnerable family, and is unlikely to have finished secondary schooling.

The late President, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, had once said a study by his office into the background of convicts seeking mercy showed “a social and economic bias”. He digressed (If you digress, you move away from the subject you are talking or writing about and talk or write about something different for a while – पीछे हटना) from his prepared text during a public lecture to ask, “Why are so many poor people on death row?” The link between socio-economic standing and access to competent legal counsel and effective representation is quite strong. A question of concern that arises is whether these statistics indicate systemic bias or institutionalised prejudice (Prejudice is an unreasonable dislike of a particular group of people or things, or a preference for one group of people or things over another). It is not uncommon that legal grounds unavailable to the vulnerable are invoked in favour of the influential.

A recent instance is that of four prisoners from a political party who were sentenced to death for burning a bus during a protest and killing three women students. The court, while commuting (If a death sentence or prison sentence is commuted to a less serious punishment, it is changed to that punishment – पक्षपात) their sentence, invoked the ‘doctrine of diminished responsibility’ and reasoned that those gripped by mob frenzy were not fully cognisant (If someone is cognizant of something, they are aware of it or understand it – ध्यान में रखते) of the situation around them. While invoking any ground to commute a death sentence to life is welcome, the impression is inescapable that such relief often comes at a very late stage and only to those with the means to pursue legal remedies till the very end. When a judicial system that is seen as favouring the influential resorts to capital punishment, it will be vulnerable to the charge of socio-economic bias. Law and society, therefore, will be better served if the death penalty itself is abolished. These statistics must reinforce the larger moral argument against the state taking the life of a human being — any human being — as punishment.

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TEST YOUR SKILLS

SYNONYM

COGNIZANT
a) Apprehensive
b) Informed
c) Observant
d) Any of the above

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d) Any of the above

PREJUDICE
a) Disgust
b) Fairness
c) Tolerance
d) Happiness

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a) Disgust

AFFINITY
a) Dislike
b) Hatred
c) Rapport
d) All of the above

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c) Rapport

CLEMENCY
a) Cruelty
b) Meanness
c) Endurance
d) No Mercy

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c) Endurance

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