KAZAKHSTAN TO INTRODUCE DEATH PENALTY FOR ATTACKS ON PRESIDENT?
Published:
14 January 2002 y., Monday
The Kazakh government has drafted amendments to existing antiterrorism legislation that provide for stiffer punishment for involvement in and advocacy of terrorism, Sergei Zhalybin, the chairman of the parliament committee for legislation and court reform, as saying. Those amendments provide among other things for the imposition of the death penalty or life imprisonment for attempts to assassinate the president. Zhalybin said that bill was first submitted in July 2001 and thus is not a response to the 11 September terrorist attacks in the United States.
A second bill under consideration would require all adult citizens to submit to fingerprinting as part of the procedure for applying for identification documents, according to ITAR-TASS and ntvru.com on 10 January.
Šaltinis:
rferl.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The Submarine Crew Has Enough Oxygen For 8 Days
more »
The park of Soviet sculptures is being built in Grûtas forest near resort Druskininkai. It will be a big historical museum with various materials from soviet times. Now tourists and Lithuanians themselves already visit it, but some organizations and politicians are against this park. The questions about legality of this museum are solved in courts and even in Constitutional one.
more »
Police leaders met in Tallinn two weeks ago to discuss improving discipline on the force after a police officer who was driving drunk and without a license hit and killed a woman, pushing the number of deaths caused by allegedly drunk policemen.
more »
A German court ruled on Thursday that people paid to talk dirty in the Internet's swelling number of sex chatrooms should enjoy the same rights as other workers, regardless of whether their job is "immoral."
more »
The Lustration Court on 10 August ruled that President Aleksander Kwasniewski did not lie in his lustration statement in declaring that he had not been a communist-era secret service collaborator.
more »
Foreigners always miss the information about Lithuania, but this site will help tourists to learn more about main cities and Lithuanian buisiness and culture.
more »
Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski is to appear in court to defend himself against allegations that he worked with communist-era secret police.
more »
Law professor Ferenc Madl was inaugurated as Hungary's new President on Friday in a ceremony attended by 10,000 people at the historic Parliament building.
more »
You are welcome to read articles on computer crimes and punishment; winnings of the up-to-date technologies, their advantages and imperfections.
more »
The Prosecutor General's Office closed a criminal case against former Prime Minister Andris Skele.
more »