Leo Tanzania Yaamriwa Kuifuta Adhabu ya Kifo kwa Kunyongwa Mpaka Kufa!. Ni Aibu Tanzania Mpaka Ilazimishwe!. Rais Samia, Futilia Mbali Unyama Huu!

Leo Tanzania Yaamriwa Kuifuta Adhabu ya Kifo kwa Kunyongwa Mpaka Kufa!. Ni Aibu Tanzania Mpaka Ilazimishwe!. Rais Samia, Futilia Mbali Unyama Huu!

Wanabodi

Tumepiga kelele sana humu kuhusu adhabu ya kifo kwa kunyongwa mpaka kufa kuwa barbaric!.

Hatimaye leo Tanzania tumeamriwa kuifuta adhabu hiyo ya kifo kwa mtu kunyongwa mpaka kufa!. Ni adhabu ya ukatili mno, iliyoletwa na wakoloni ili kuwa ogofya wananchi!. Ni aibu kwa Tanzania iliyostaarabika, kuendelea kunyonga watu, mpaka inalazimishwa kuifuta!. Tunamuomba Rais Samia, kuifutilia mbali adhabu ya kifo. Huu ni unyama wa hali ya juu!.
Taarifa rasmi

PRESS RELEASE – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Judgement by the African Court on Human and Peoples Rights

Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania

ARUSHA, TANZANIA – On 5 February 2025, the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Court) delivered its Judgement on Application No. 003 of 2018 (Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania). The case was filed on 2 March 2018 and an Application for interim measures was filed on 6 May 2019. Provisional measures were ordered on 17 May 2019. On 20 March 2021, the Applicant filed his Affidavit in support of the submissions on reparations.

The Applicant was represented by the Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU), with Advocate Donald Deya, as the Lead Counsel, assisted by Ms. Sarah Peeters.
PALU acknowledges and applauds the invaluable support of the Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide in this case, which contributed to achieving its successful outcome.

KEY FINDINGS IN THE JUDGEMENT:
The African Court made the following findings and relevant orders to the Respondent:

Finds that the Respondent (United Republic of Tanzania) violated the right to life guaranteed under Article 4 of the Charter in relation to the mandatory imposition of the death penalty and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code.

Finds that the Respondent has violated the right to dignity protected under Article 5 of the Charter due to the method, used for carrying out the death penalty, namely execution by hanging, and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove hanging, as a method of enforcing the death penalty, from its Penal Code.

Orders the Respondent to take all necessary measures, through its internal processes and within one (1) year of the notification of this Judgment, for the rehearing of the case on the sentencing of the Applicant through a procedure that does not allow the mandatory imposition of the death sentence and upholds the full discretion of the judicial officer.

Orders the Respondent to publish this Judgment, within a period of three (3) months from the date of notification, on the websites of the Judiciary, and the Ministry for Constitutional and Legal Affairs, and ensure that the text of the Judgment is accessible for at least one (1) year after the date of publication.

Orders the Respondent to submit to it within six (6) months from the date of notification of this Judgment, a Report on the status of implementation of the decision set forth herein and thereafter, every six (6) months until the Court considers that there has been full implementation thereof.

BACKGROUND OF CASE:
The Applicant was convicted of murder and sentenced to death by hanging on 17 March 1995 by the High Court of Tanzania sitting in Tabora. On 10 June 1999, the Court of Appeal in Tabora, Tanzania's highest court, upheld the sentence. In his Application, the Applicant alleged that the trial before the High Court was marred by irregularities, and that both the High Court and the Court of Appeal erred in their assessment of prosecution and visual identification evidence. The alleged violations concern the rights protected in Articles 3(2), 4 and 7(1)(c) of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Charter).

The Application is filed against the United Republic of Tanzania (the Respondent), which became a Party to the African Charter on 21 October 1986 and the Protocol to the African Charter on the Establishment of an African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the Protocol) on 7 February 2006. The Respondent further deposited, on 29 March 2010, the Declaration under Article 34(6) of the Protocol through which it accepted the jurisdiction of the Court to receive cases from individuals and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs). This declaration was later withdrawn on 21 November 2019, but the African Court has previously held that this withdrawal has no effect on pending cases.

On 17 May 2019, ln view of the circumstances of this case which bear the risk that execution of the death sentence may impair the enjoyment of the rights by the African Charter, the Court unanimously ordered the Respondent to stay execution of the death sentence, subject to the decision on the main Application, and to report to the Court on the measures taken to implement it.

PALUS’ RESPONSE TO JUDGEMENT:
PALU continues to be an advocate for good governance and rule of law but most especially the defense and protection of all human and peoples’ rights for all Africans and every person resident in Africa. PALU is pleased with the final judgement delivered by the African Court and commits to assist the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania to comply with the judgement as its commitment as an African Union Member State.

Secondly, PALU implores the Tanzanian government to ensure effective and complete implementation of the orders of the Court, especially in taking all necessary measures to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code, a request still pending implementation from the previous judgement of the Court in the landmark decision in Ally Rajabu and Others v United Republic of Tanzania (Application No 007 of 2015), delivered on 28 November 2019.

COMMENTS/STATEMENTS/REMARKS:
Adv. Donald Deya, PALU CEO: “This is a monumental Judgement for the Death Penalty Campaign in Africa and continues the evolution of progressive jurisprudence from the African Court on the issue of the death penalty in Africa. We, together with our partners in the Campaign, will continue to pursue this matter through the Request for an Advisory Opinion that we lodged in the Court in November 2024 to establish whether the death penalty is not compatible with the provisions of the African Charter.

We continue advocating that the imposition and implementation of the death penalty amounts to an arbitrary deprivation of life in violation of Article 4 and violates Article 5’s prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment or treatment.

We therefore hope and expect that the African Court will determine that AU Member States are obligated to abolish all laws and/or regulations permitting the imposition and implementation of the death penalty, in furtherance of their bold decision today.”

We also congratulate our esteemed colleagues and partners, the Centre for Human Rights, the Institute for Human Rights and Development in Africa, the Legal and Human Rights Centre, and the Independent Expert on the Enjoyment of Human Rights by Persons with Albinism (Amicus), for their impactful collaboration as it significantly contributed to the advancement of the protection and enjoyment of human rights by People With Disabilities, as exemplified by today’s landmark judgment from the African Court.

NOTES TO EDITORS:
The Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU) is the premier continental membership forum of and for individual African lawyers and lawyers’ associations in Africa. It was founded in 2002 by African Bar leaders and eminent lawyers, to reflect the aspirations and concerns of the African people and to promote and defend their shared interests. Its membership comprises of the continent’s over five regional lawyers’ associations, over 54 national lawyers’ associations and over 1,000 individual lawyers spread across Africa and in the Diaspora.

ISSUED BY:
PAN AFRICAN LAWYERS UNION (PALU)
ARUSHA, TANZANIA
secretariat@lawyersofafrica.org
+255 685 078 794
www.lawyersofafrica.org
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Our mailing address is:
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No. 3 Jandu Road, Corridor Area, P.O. Box 6065 Arusha, Tanzania
Arusha
Tanzania
Paskali.
At least there has been a silent moratorium for decades. No one has been executed in the recent past (Mwinyi - Hangaya)!
 
Upo sahihi,watu wanapigwa kitanzi kama kawaida huko...tena wengi tu, tena hata mnyongaji aendi kusimama court kwa muda kama utaratibu unavotaka baada ya kunyonga mhalifu kama zamani.
Wanasiasa Huwa wanawadanganya ati hawawezi kusaini kunyonga
Ila kiukweli watu wanaokula kitanzi kama kawaida
Yaani mtu amtume asiyejulikana ateke na kuuwa mpinzani anayepiga tu makelele, awe na hofu ya kunyonga mtu katili, gaidi au mhaini
 
Mbona hii habari sijaiona kwenye taarifa ya habari yoyote
Hatuna vyombo vya habari Tanzania zaidi ya TV, Radio na Magazeti.
Chombo cha habari lazima kiwe na wanahabari wabobevu wa sheria, dini, uchumi, sanaa, teknolojia na maendeleo, ili kuweza kuandika habari zilizo sawa na sahihi.
Wabobevu ambao ni wataalamu, yaani pros.
 
Na wanyongwe tu mpaka kufa sababu hakuna namna.
Huwezi kufanya mauwaji ya kikatili Kisha muuwaji aendelee kuvuta pumzi za bure na kula na kulala jela kwa gharama za mlipa Kodi.
Adhabu ya kifo ni kuzuia wengine wasithubutu kufanya makosa yenye kuchukua adhabu ya kifo.
Hizi taasisi za magharibi ndio zina toa fedha ku sponsor na kusapoti hizi fikra duni zisizo na maadili ya kibinaafamu.
 
Wanabodi

Tumepiga kelele sana humu kuhusu adhabu ya kifo kwa kunyongwa mpaka kufa kuwa barbaric!.

Hatimaye leo Tanzania tumeamriwa kuifuta adhabu hiyo ya kifo kwa mtu kunyongwa mpaka kufa!. Ni adhabu ya ukatili mno, iliyoletwa na wakoloni ili kuwa ogofya wananchi!. Ni aibu kwa Tanzania iliyostaarabika, kuendelea kunyonga watu, mpaka inalazimishwa kuifuta!. Tunamuomba Rais Samia, kuifutilia mbali adhabu ya kifo. Huu ni unyama wa hali ya juu!.
Taarifa rasmi

PRESS RELEASE – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Judgement by the African Court on Human and Peoples Rights

Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania

ARUSHA, TANZANIA – On 5 February 2025, the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Court) delivered its Judgement on Application No. 003 of 2018 (Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania). The case was filed on 2 March 2018 and an Application for interim measures was filed on 6 May 2019. Provisional measures were ordered on 17 May 2019. On 20 March 2021, the Applicant filed his Affidavit in support of the submissions on reparations.

The Applicant was represented by the Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU), with Advocate Donald Deya, as the Lead Counsel, assisted by Ms. Sarah Peeters.
PALU acknowledges and applauds the invaluable support of the Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide in this case, which contributed to achieving its successful outcome.

KEY FINDINGS IN THE JUDGEMENT:
The African Court made the following findings and relevant orders to the Respondent:

Finds that the Respondent (United Republic of Tanzania) violated the right to life guaranteed under Article 4 of the Charter in relation to the mandatory imposition of the death penalty and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code.

Finds that the Respondent has violated the right to dignity protected under Article 5 of the Charter due to the method, used for carrying out the death penalty, namely execution by hanging, and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove hanging, as a method of enforcing the death penalty, from its Penal Code.

Orders the Respondent to take all necessary measures, through its internal processes and within one (1) year of the notification of this Judgment, for the rehearing of the case on the sentencing of the Applicant through a procedure that does not allow the mandatory imposition of the death sentence and upholds the full discretion of the judicial officer.

Orders the Respondent to publish this Judgment, within a period of three (3) months from the date of notification, on the websites of the Judiciary, and the Ministry for Constitutional and Legal Affairs, and ensure that the text of the Judgment is accessible for at least one (1) year after the date of publication.

Orders the Respondent to submit to it within six (6) months from the date of notification of this Judgment, a Report on the status of implementation of the decision set forth herein and thereafter, every six (6) months until the Court considers that there has been full implementation thereof.

BACKGROUND OF CASE:
The Applicant was convicted of murder and sentenced to death by hanging on 17 March 1995 by the High Court of Tanzania sitting in Tabora. On 10 June 1999, the Court of Appeal in Tabora, Tanzania's highest court, upheld the sentence. In his Application, the Applicant alleged that the trial before the High Court was marred by irregularities, and that both the High Court and the Court of Appeal erred in their assessment of prosecution and visual identification evidence. The alleged violations concern the rights protected in Articles 3(2), 4 and 7(1)(c) of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Charter).

The Application is filed against the United Republic of Tanzania (the Respondent), which became a Party to the African Charter on 21 October 1986 and the Protocol to the African Charter on the Establishment of an African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the Protocol) on 7 February 2006. The Respondent further deposited, on 29 March 2010, the Declaration under Article 34(6) of the Protocol through which it accepted the jurisdiction of the Court to receive cases from individuals and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs). This declaration was later withdrawn on 21 November 2019, but the African Court has previously held that this withdrawal has no effect on pending cases.

On 17 May 2019, ln view of the circumstances of this case which bear the risk that execution of the death sentence may impair the enjoyment of the rights by the African Charter, the Court unanimously ordered the Respondent to stay execution of the death sentence, subject to the decision on the main Application, and to report to the Court on the measures taken to implement it.

PALUS’ RESPONSE TO JUDGEMENT:
PALU continues to be an advocate for good governance and rule of law but most especially the defense and protection of all human and peoples’ rights for all Africans and every person resident in Africa. PALU is pleased with the final judgement delivered by the African Court and commits to assist the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania to comply with the judgement as its commitment as an African Union Member State.

Secondly, PALU implores the Tanzanian government to ensure effective and complete implementation of the orders of the Court, especially in taking all necessary measures to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code, a request still pending implementation from the previous judgement of the Court in the landmark decision in Ally Rajabu and Others v United Republic of Tanzania (Application No 007 of 2015), delivered on 28 November 2019.

COMMENTS/STATEMENTS/REMARKS:
Adv. Donald Deya, PALU CEO: “This is a monumental Judgement for the Death Penalty Campaign in Africa and continues the evolution of progressive jurisprudence from the African Court on the issue of the death penalty in Africa. We, together with our partners in the Campaign, will continue to pursue this matter through the Request for an Advisory Opinion that we lodged in the Court in November 2024 to establish whether the death penalty is not compatible with the provisions of the African Charter.

We continue advocating that the imposition and implementation of the death penalty amounts to an arbitrary deprivation of life in violation of Article 4 and violates Article 5’s prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment or treatment.

We therefore hope and expect that the African Court will determine that AU Member States are obligated to abolish all laws and/or regulations permitting the imposition and implementation of the death penalty, in furtherance of their bold decision today.”

We also congratulate our esteemed colleagues and partners, the Centre for Human Rights, the Institute for Human Rights and Development in Africa, the Legal and Human Rights Centre, and the Independent Expert on the Enjoyment of Human Rights by Persons with Albinism (Amicus), for their impactful collaboration as it significantly contributed to the advancement of the protection and enjoyment of human rights by People With Disabilities, as exemplified by today’s landmark judgment from the African Court.

NOTES TO EDITORS:
The Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU) is the premier continental membership forum of and for individual African lawyers and lawyers’ associations in Africa. It was founded in 2002 by African Bar leaders and eminent lawyers, to reflect the aspirations and concerns of the African people and to promote and defend their shared interests. Its membership comprises of the continent’s over five regional lawyers’ associations, over 54 national lawyers’ associations and over 1,000 individual lawyers spread across Africa and in the Diaspora.

ISSUED BY:
PAN AFRICAN LAWYERS UNION (PALU)
ARUSHA, TANZANIA
secretariat@lawyersofafrica.org
+255 685 078 794
www.lawyersofafrica.org
Facebook icon
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Copyright ©️ 2025 Pan African Lawyers Union, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website
Our mailing address is:
Pan African Lawyers Union
No. 3 Jandu Road, Corridor Area, P.O. Box 6065 Arusha, Tanzania
Arusha
Tanzania
Paskali.
Hivi huyu jamaa 👆 huwaga ana ubongo kichani kweli 🙄🙄🙄🙄 kufuta adhabu ya kifo ni kupoteza muda tu kwa tanzania bwana abdul akitaka kukuua anakuhua tu nje ya mfumo wa Mahakama
 
Kumbe Amerika hawajastaarabika?
Kama sisi ni sheria na hakuna alieuwawa sasa hiyo ni sheria?
Kuna nchi ukishikwa na Unga tu unanyong'wa itakuwa kuuwa
Kuna States ngapi US wanauwa?
Ustaarabu ni nini? Kuacha watu wauwe na wao wakila mvua kidogo na kuachiwa eti
Atakae muuwa ndugu yako ukamuona utamsalimia ? Na kumwambia nimekusamehe twende tukanywe chai eee
 
Judgement by the African Court on Human and Peoples Rights
Kwa nakala niliyoona mahali ni kuwa Tanzania, Malawi, Rwanda na Ghana nadhani zilipunguza nguvu mahaka hii kwa kukataa ratification ya vipengele Fulani kwenye convention ya mambo haya na ilikuwa 2020!!!
 
Na wanyongwe tu mpaka kufa sababu hakuna namna.
Huwezi kufanya mauwaji ya kikatili Kisha muuwaji aendelee kuvuta pumzi za bure na kula na kulala jela kwa gharama za mlipa Kodi.
Adhabu ya kifo ni kuzuia wengine wasithubutu kufanya makosa yenye kuchukua adhabu ya kifo.
Hizi taasisi za magharibi ndio zina toa fedha ku sponsor na kusapoti hizi fikra duni zisizo na maadili ya kibinaafamu.
1. Sio kila aliye kwenye death row aliua. Uzoefu wa Marekani unaonesha kwamba wapo wengi walionyongwa, lakini baadaye ushahidi wa DNA ukathibitisha kwamba hawakuwa behind mauaji waliyotiwa nayo hatiani.
2. Studies mbalimbali nchini Marekani zimeonesha kwamba states zenye adhabu ya kifo zina homicide rates ambazo kimsingi hazitofautiani na za states ambazo hazina death penalty!
3. Why and how on earth would you justify a wrong with another wrong?
 
Wanabodi

Tumepiga kelele sana humu kuhusu adhabu ya kifo kwa kunyongwa mpaka kufa kuwa barbaric!.

Hatimaye leo Tanzania tumeamriwa kuifuta adhabu hiyo ya kifo kwa mtu kunyongwa mpaka kufa!. Ni adhabu ya ukatili mno, iliyoletwa na wakoloni ili kuwa ogofya wananchi!. Ni aibu kwa Tanzania iliyostaarabika, kuendelea kunyonga watu, mpaka inalazimishwa kuifuta!. Tunamuomba Rais Samia, kuifutilia mbali adhabu ya kifo. Huu ni unyama wa hali ya juu!.

Taarifa rasmi

PRESS RELEASE – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Judgement by the African Court on Human and Peoples Rights

Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania

ARUSHA, TANZANIA – On 5 February 2025, the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Court) delivered its Judgement on Application No. 003 of 2018 (Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania). The case was filed on 2 March 2018 and an Application for interim measures was filed on 6 May 2019. Provisional measures were ordered on 17 May 2019. On 20 March 2021, the Applicant filed his Affidavit in support of the submissions on reparations.

The Applicant was represented by the Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU), with Advocate Donald Deya, as the Lead Counsel, assisted by Ms. Sarah Peeters.
PALU acknowledges and applauds the invaluable support of the Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide in this case, which contributed to achieving its successful outcome.

KEY FINDINGS IN THE JUDGEMENT:
The African Court made the following findings and relevant orders to the Respondent:

Finds that the Respondent (United Republic of Tanzania) violated the right to life guaranteed under Article 4 of the Charter in relation to the mandatory imposition of the death penalty and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code.

Finds that the Respondent has violated the right to dignity protected under Article 5 of the Charter due to the method, used for carrying out the death penalty, namely execution by hanging, and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove hanging, as a method of enforcing the death penalty, from its Penal Code.

Orders the Respondent to take all necessary measures, through its internal processes and within one (1) year of the notification of this Judgment, for the rehearing of the case on the sentencing of the Applicant through a procedure that does not allow the mandatory imposition of the death sentence and upholds the full discretion of the judicial officer.

Orders the Respondent to publish this Judgment, within a period of three (3) months from the date of notification, on the websites of the Judiciary, and the Ministry for Constitutional and Legal Affairs, and ensure that the text of the Judgment is accessible for at least one (1) year after the date of publication.

Orders the Respondent to submit to it within six (6) months from the date of notification of this Judgment, a Report on the status of implementation of the decision set forth herein and thereafter, every six (6) months until the Court considers that there has been full implementation thereof.

BACKGROUND OF CASE:
The Applicant was convicted of murder and sentenced to death by hanging on 17 March 1995 by the High Court of Tanzania sitting in Tabora. On 10 June 1999, the Court of Appeal in Tabora, Tanzania's highest court, upheld the sentence. In his Application, the Applicant alleged that the trial before the High Court was marred by irregularities, and that both the High Court and the Court of Appeal erred in their assessment of prosecution and visual identification evidence. The alleged violations concern the rights protected in Articles 3(2), 4 and 7(1)(c) of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Charter).

The Application is filed against the United Republic of Tanzania (the Respondent), which became a Party to the African Charter on 21 October 1986 and the Protocol to the African Charter on the Establishment of an African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the Protocol) on 7 February 2006. The Respondent further deposited, on 29 March 2010, the Declaration under Article 34(6) of the Protocol through which it accepted the jurisdiction of the Court to receive cases from individuals and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs). This declaration was later withdrawn on 21 November 2019, but the African Court has previously held that this withdrawal has no effect on pending cases.

On 17 May 2019, ln view of the circumstances of this case which bear the risk that execution of the death sentence may impair the enjoyment of the rights by the African Charter, the Court unanimously ordered the Respondent to stay execution of the death sentence, subject to the decision on the main Application, and to report to the Court on the measures taken to implement it.

PALUS’ RESPONSE TO JUDGEMENT:
PALU continues to be an advocate for good governance and rule of law but most especially the defense and protection of all human and peoples’ rights for all Africans and every person resident in Africa. PALU is pleased with the final judgement delivered by the African Court and commits to assist the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania to comply with the judgement as its commitment as an African Union Member State.

Secondly, PALU implores the Tanzanian government to ensure effective and complete implementation of the orders of the Court, especially in taking all necessary measures to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code, a request still pending implementation from the previous judgement of the Court in the landmark decision in Ally Rajabu and Others v United Republic of Tanzania (Application No 007 of 2015), delivered on 28 November 2019.

COMMENTS/STATEMENTS/REMARKS:
Adv. Donald Deya, PALU CEO: “This is a monumental Judgement for the Death Penalty Campaign in Africa and continues the evolution of progressive jurisprudence from the African Court on the issue of the death penalty in Africa. We, together with our partners in the Campaign, will continue to pursue this matter through the Request for an Advisory Opinion that we lodged in the Court in November 2024 to establish whether the death penalty is not compatible with the provisions of the African Charter.

We continue advocating that the imposition and implementation of the death penalty amounts to an arbitrary deprivation of life in violation of Article 4 and violates Article 5’s prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment or treatment.

We therefore hope and expect that the African Court will determine that AU Member States are obligated to abolish all laws and/or regulations permitting the imposition and implementation of the death penalty, in furtherance of their bold decision today.”

We also congratulate our esteemed colleagues and partners, the Centre for Human Rights, the Institute for Human Rights and Development in Africa, the Legal and Human Rights Centre, and the Independent Expert on the Enjoyment of Human Rights by Persons with Albinism (Amicus), for their impactful collaboration as it significantly contributed to the advancement of the protection and enjoyment of human rights by People With Disabilities, as exemplified by today’s landmark judgment from the African Court.

NOTES TO EDITORS:
The Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU) is the premier continental membership forum of and for individual African lawyers and lawyers’ associations in Africa. It was founded in 2002 by African Bar leaders and eminent lawyers, to reflect the aspirations and concerns of the African people and to promote and defend their shared interests. Its membership comprises of the continent’s over five regional lawyers’ associations, over 54 national lawyers’ associations and over 1,000 individual lawyers spread across Africa and in the Diaspora.

ISSUED BY:
PAN AFRICAN LAWYERS UNION (PALU)
ARUSHA, TANZANIA
secretariat@lawyersofafrica.org
+255 685 078 794
www.lawyersofafrica.org
Facebook icon
X icon
Instagram icon
LinkedIn icon
YouTube icon
Copyright ©️ 2025 Pan African Lawyers Union, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website
Our mailing address is:
Pan African Lawyers Union
No. 3 Jandu Road, Corridor Area, P.O. Box 6065 Arusha, Tanzania
Arusha
Tanzania
Paskali.
Thanks bro.
 
Wanabodi

Tumepiga kelele sana humu kuhusu adhabu ya kifo kwa kunyongwa mpaka kufa kuwa barbaric!.

Hatimaye leo Tanzania tumeamriwa kuifuta adhabu hiyo ya kifo kwa mtu kunyongwa mpaka kufa!. Ni adhabu ya ukatili mno, iliyoletwa na wakoloni ili kuwa ogofya wananchi!. Ni aibu kwa Tanzania iliyostaarabika, kuendelea kunyonga watu, mpaka inalazimishwa kuifuta!. Tunamuomba Rais Samia, kuifutilia mbali adhabu ya kifo. Huu ni unyama wa hali ya juu!.

Taarifa rasmi

PRESS RELEASE – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Judgement by the African Court on Human and Peoples Rights

Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania

ARUSHA, TANZANIA – On 5 February 2025, the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Court) delivered its Judgement on Application No. 003 of 2018 (Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania). The case was filed on 2 March 2018 and an Application for interim measures was filed on 6 May 2019. Provisional measures were ordered on 17 May 2019. On 20 March 2021, the Applicant filed his Affidavit in support of the submissions on reparations.

The Applicant was represented by the Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU), with Advocate Donald Deya, as the Lead Counsel, assisted by Ms. Sarah Peeters.
PALU acknowledges and applauds the invaluable support of the Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide in this case, which contributed to achieving its successful outcome.

KEY FINDINGS IN THE JUDGEMENT:
The African Court made the following findings and relevant orders to the Respondent:

Finds that the Respondent (United Republic of Tanzania) violated the right to life guaranteed under Article 4 of the Charter in relation to the mandatory imposition of the death penalty and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code.

Finds that the Respondent has violated the right to dignity protected under Article 5 of the Charter due to the method, used for carrying out the death penalty, namely execution by hanging, and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove hanging, as a method of enforcing the death penalty, from its Penal Code.

Orders the Respondent to take all necessary measures, through its internal processes and within one (1) year of the notification of this Judgment, for the rehearing of the case on the sentencing of the Applicant through a procedure that does not allow the mandatory imposition of the death sentence and upholds the full discretion of the judicial officer.

Orders the Respondent to publish this Judgment, within a period of three (3) months from the date of notification, on the websites of the Judiciary, and the Ministry for Constitutional and Legal Affairs, and ensure that the text of the Judgment is accessible for at least one (1) year after the date of publication.

Orders the Respondent to submit to it within six (6) months from the date of notification of this Judgment, a Report on the status of implementation of the decision set forth herein and thereafter, every six (6) months until the Court considers that there has been full implementation thereof.

BACKGROUND OF CASE:
The Applicant was convicted of murder and sentenced to death by hanging on 17 March 1995 by the High Court of Tanzania sitting in Tabora. On 10 June 1999, the Court of Appeal in Tabora, Tanzania's highest court, upheld the sentence. In his Application, the Applicant alleged that the trial before the High Court was marred by irregularities, and that both the High Court and the Court of Appeal erred in their assessment of prosecution and visual identification evidence. The alleged violations concern the rights protected in Articles 3(2), 4 and 7(1)(c) of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Charter).

The Application is filed against the United Republic of Tanzania (the Respondent), which became a Party to the African Charter on 21 October 1986 and the Protocol to the African Charter on the Establishment of an African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the Protocol) on 7 February 2006. The Respondent further deposited, on 29 March 2010, the Declaration under Article 34(6) of the Protocol through which it accepted the jurisdiction of the Court to receive cases from individuals and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs). This declaration was later withdrawn on 21 November 2019, but the African Court has previously held that this withdrawal has no effect on pending cases.

On 17 May 2019, ln view of the circumstances of this case which bear the risk that execution of the death sentence may impair the enjoyment of the rights by the African Charter, the Court unanimously ordered the Respondent to stay execution of the death sentence, subject to the decision on the main Application, and to report to the Court on the measures taken to implement it.

PALUS’ RESPONSE TO JUDGEMENT:
PALU continues to be an advocate for good governance and rule of law but most especially the defense and protection of all human and peoples’ rights for all Africans and every person resident in Africa. PALU is pleased with the final judgement delivered by the African Court and commits to assist the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania to comply with the judgement as its commitment as an African Union Member State.

Secondly, PALU implores the Tanzanian government to ensure effective and complete implementation of the orders of the Court, especially in taking all necessary measures to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code, a request still pending implementation from the previous judgement of the Court in the landmark decision in Ally Rajabu and Others v United Republic of Tanzania (Application No 007 of 2015), delivered on 28 November 2019.

COMMENTS/STATEMENTS/REMARKS:
Adv. Donald Deya, PALU CEO: “This is a monumental Judgement for the Death Penalty Campaign in Africa and continues the evolution of progressive jurisprudence from the African Court on the issue of the death penalty in Africa. We, together with our partners in the Campaign, will continue to pursue this matter through the Request for an Advisory Opinion that we lodged in the Court in November 2024 to establish whether the death penalty is not compatible with the provisions of the African Charter.

We continue advocating that the imposition and implementation of the death penalty amounts to an arbitrary deprivation of life in violation of Article 4 and violates Article 5’s prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment or treatment.

We therefore hope and expect that the African Court will determine that AU Member States are obligated to abolish all laws and/or regulations permitting the imposition and implementation of the death penalty, in furtherance of their bold decision today.”

We also congratulate our esteemed colleagues and partners, the Centre for Human Rights, the Institute for Human Rights and Development in Africa, the Legal and Human Rights Centre, and the Independent Expert on the Enjoyment of Human Rights by Persons with Albinism (Amicus), for their impactful collaboration as it significantly contributed to the advancement of the protection and enjoyment of human rights by People With Disabilities, as exemplified by today’s landmark judgment from the African Court.

NOTES TO EDITORS:
The Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU) is the premier continental membership forum of and for individual African lawyers and lawyers’ associations in Africa. It was founded in 2002 by African Bar leaders and eminent lawyers, to reflect the aspirations and concerns of the African people and to promote and defend their shared interests. Its membership comprises of the continent’s over five regional lawyers’ associations, over 54 national lawyers’ associations and over 1,000 individual lawyers spread across Africa and in the Diaspora.

ISSUED BY:
PAN AFRICAN LAWYERS UNION (PALU)
ARUSHA, TANZANIA
secretariat@lawyersofafrica.org
+255 685 078 794
www.lawyersofafrica.org
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Kunyonga Hadi kufa ni unyama kwa mtu aliyeua? Mzee siku wakiua ndugu wa karibu kinyama ndo utajua hii adhabu ya kunyonga Hadi kufa Bado tunaihitaji Tanzania.
 
Siungi Mkono na nitakuja na andiko la kuelezea sababu za kutounga mkono. Kuna Majitu Makatili Sana hapa Duniani ambayo ukisikia unyama yaliyotenda mpaka shetani mwenyewe anayaogopa. Sasa Majitu ya namna hiyo yakijua hakuna adhabu ya kifo yatafanya unyama mkubwa sana mpaka ardhi ibakie inabubujikwa machozi ya huzuni na kutoa laana

Ngoja siku nikipata muda na kutulia nitawaleteeni andiko
Komredi big chawa kwa mara ya kwanza nakuunga mkono na miguu, kuna watu wamefanya unyama zaidi ya unyama wenyewe wakakae jela tu wale ugali wa bure?

Kuna pia hawa wanaolawiti watoto hawa nao wahasiwe kwanza kisha wauawe kwa kupigwa nyundo za kichwa kunyongwa watakufa kistaarabu.
 
Wanabodi

Tumepiga kelele sana humu kuhusu adhabu ya kifo kwa kunyongwa mpaka kufa kuwa barbaric!.

Hatimaye leo Tanzania tumeamriwa kuifuta adhabu hiyo ya kifo kwa mtu kunyongwa mpaka kufa!. Ni adhabu ya ukatili mno, iliyoletwa na wakoloni ili kuwa ogofya wananchi!. Ni aibu kwa Tanzania iliyostaarabika, kuendelea kunyonga watu, mpaka inalazimishwa kuifuta!. Tunamuomba Rais Samia, kuifutilia mbali adhabu ya kifo. Huu ni unyama wa hali ya juu!.

Taarifa rasmi

PRESS RELEASE – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Judgement by the African Court on Human and Peoples Rights

Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania

ARUSHA, TANZANIA – On 5 February 2025, the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Court) delivered its Judgement on Application No. 003 of 2018 (Ladislaus Chalula v United Republic of Tanzania). The case was filed on 2 March 2018 and an Application for interim measures was filed on 6 May 2019. Provisional measures were ordered on 17 May 2019. On 20 March 2021, the Applicant filed his Affidavit in support of the submissions on reparations.

The Applicant was represented by the Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU), with Advocate Donald Deya, as the Lead Counsel, assisted by Ms. Sarah Peeters.
PALU acknowledges and applauds the invaluable support of the Cornell Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide in this case, which contributed to achieving its successful outcome.

KEY FINDINGS IN THE JUDGEMENT:
The African Court made the following findings and relevant orders to the Respondent:

Finds that the Respondent (United Republic of Tanzania) violated the right to life guaranteed under Article 4 of the Charter in relation to the mandatory imposition of the death penalty and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code.

Finds that the Respondent has violated the right to dignity protected under Article 5 of the Charter due to the method, used for carrying out the death penalty, namely execution by hanging, and Orders the Respondent State to take all necessary measures, within one (1) year from the notification of this Judgment, to remove hanging, as a method of enforcing the death penalty, from its Penal Code.

Orders the Respondent to take all necessary measures, through its internal processes and within one (1) year of the notification of this Judgment, for the rehearing of the case on the sentencing of the Applicant through a procedure that does not allow the mandatory imposition of the death sentence and upholds the full discretion of the judicial officer.

Orders the Respondent to publish this Judgment, within a period of three (3) months from the date of notification, on the websites of the Judiciary, and the Ministry for Constitutional and Legal Affairs, and ensure that the text of the Judgment is accessible for at least one (1) year after the date of publication.

Orders the Respondent to submit to it within six (6) months from the date of notification of this Judgment, a Report on the status of implementation of the decision set forth herein and thereafter, every six (6) months until the Court considers that there has been full implementation thereof.

BACKGROUND OF CASE:
The Applicant was convicted of murder and sentenced to death by hanging on 17 March 1995 by the High Court of Tanzania sitting in Tabora. On 10 June 1999, the Court of Appeal in Tabora, Tanzania's highest court, upheld the sentence. In his Application, the Applicant alleged that the trial before the High Court was marred by irregularities, and that both the High Court and the Court of Appeal erred in their assessment of prosecution and visual identification evidence. The alleged violations concern the rights protected in Articles 3(2), 4 and 7(1)(c) of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Charter).

The Application is filed against the United Republic of Tanzania (the Respondent), which became a Party to the African Charter on 21 October 1986 and the Protocol to the African Charter on the Establishment of an African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the Protocol) on 7 February 2006. The Respondent further deposited, on 29 March 2010, the Declaration under Article 34(6) of the Protocol through which it accepted the jurisdiction of the Court to receive cases from individuals and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs). This declaration was later withdrawn on 21 November 2019, but the African Court has previously held that this withdrawal has no effect on pending cases.

On 17 May 2019, ln view of the circumstances of this case which bear the risk that execution of the death sentence may impair the enjoyment of the rights by the African Charter, the Court unanimously ordered the Respondent to stay execution of the death sentence, subject to the decision on the main Application, and to report to the Court on the measures taken to implement it.

PALUS’ RESPONSE TO JUDGEMENT:
PALU continues to be an advocate for good governance and rule of law but most especially the defense and protection of all human and peoples’ rights for all Africans and every person resident in Africa. PALU is pleased with the final judgement delivered by the African Court and commits to assist the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania to comply with the judgement as its commitment as an African Union Member State.

Secondly, PALU implores the Tanzanian government to ensure effective and complete implementation of the orders of the Court, especially in taking all necessary measures to remove the mandatory imposition of the death penalty from its Penal Code, a request still pending implementation from the previous judgement of the Court in the landmark decision in Ally Rajabu and Others v United Republic of Tanzania (Application No 007 of 2015), delivered on 28 November 2019.

COMMENTS/STATEMENTS/REMARKS:
Adv. Donald Deya, PALU CEO: “This is a monumental Judgement for the Death Penalty Campaign in Africa and continues the evolution of progressive jurisprudence from the African Court on the issue of the death penalty in Africa. We, together with our partners in the Campaign, will continue to pursue this matter through the Request for an Advisory Opinion that we lodged in the Court in November 2024 to establish whether the death penalty is not compatible with the provisions of the African Charter.

We continue advocating that the imposition and implementation of the death penalty amounts to an arbitrary deprivation of life in violation of Article 4 and violates Article 5’s prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment or treatment.

We therefore hope and expect that the African Court will determine that AU Member States are obligated to abolish all laws and/or regulations permitting the imposition and implementation of the death penalty, in furtherance of their bold decision today.”

We also congratulate our esteemed colleagues and partners, the Centre for Human Rights, the Institute for Human Rights and Development in Africa, the Legal and Human Rights Centre, and the Independent Expert on the Enjoyment of Human Rights by Persons with Albinism (Amicus), for their impactful collaboration as it significantly contributed to the advancement of the protection and enjoyment of human rights by People With Disabilities, as exemplified by today’s landmark judgment from the African Court.

NOTES TO EDITORS:
The Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU) is the premier continental membership forum of and for individual African lawyers and lawyers’ associations in Africa. It was founded in 2002 by African Bar leaders and eminent lawyers, to reflect the aspirations and concerns of the African people and to promote and defend their shared interests. Its membership comprises of the continent’s over five regional lawyers’ associations, over 54 national lawyers’ associations and over 1,000 individual lawyers spread across Africa and in the Diaspora.

ISSUED BY:
PAN AFRICAN LAWYERS UNION (PALU)
ARUSHA, TANZANIA
secretariat@lawyersofafrica.org
+255 685 078 794
www.lawyersofafrica.org
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Arusha
Tanzania
Paskali.
Tuifute baada ya Daudi Bashite aka Paul Christian Makonda kunyongwa
 
Na PF3 nayo iondolewe?

Kwa wale wasiojua hii ni Police Form 3 .
Form hii lazima ijazwe kabla hujapata huduma hospitalini hususani ukiwa na majeraha makubwa kubwa hv.
 
Siungi Mkono na nitakuja na andiko la kuelezea sababu za kutounga mkono. Kuna Majitu Makatili Sana hapa Duniani ambayo ukisikia unyama yaliyotenda mpaka shetani mwenyewe anayaogopa. Sasa Majitu ya namna hiyo yakijua hakuna adhabu ya kifo yatafanya unyama mkubwa sana mpaka ardhi ibakie inabubujikwa machozi ya huzuni na kutoa laana

Ngoja siku nikipata muda na kutulia nitawaleteeni andiko
Shetani kabisa
 
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