Capital punishment in the Netherlands

Capital punishment ("doodstraf" in Dutch) in the Netherlands was first abolished in 1870, though only in criminal law, by the Dutch justice minister Franciscus Gerardus Reinierdus Hubertus van Lilaar. Following the abolition of the death penalty, life imprisonment was made an official punishment in 1878.

Between 1945 and 1952 several war criminals from World War II were sentenced to death by the Bijzonder Gerechtshof. The last persons to be executed were Andries Jan Pieters and Artur Albrecht in March 1952.

In military law, however, capital punishment remained a legal option until 1983, when it was explicitly forbidden in the Constitution for the Kingdom of the Netherlands. In 1991, all references to the death penalty were removed from Dutch law.

Today the Netherlands operates a clear policy against capital punishment, such as not participating in extradition if the suspect has even the slightest chance of receiving the death penalty.

Articles

Executed people

Executed person Date of execution Crime(s) By Where Method
Ans van Dijk January 14, 1948 Treason of 700 hiding Jews during World War II. She collaborated with the Sicherheitsdienst Bijzonder Gerechtshof[2] Fort Bijlmer Firing squad
Anton Mussert May 7, 1946 High treason during World War II. Bijzonder Gerechtshof[2] Waalsdorpervlakte Firing squad

References

General note: All sources are in Dutch.

Sources:

References:

  1. "wetten.nl - Wet- en regelgeving - Grondwet - BWBR0001840". overheid.nl.
  2. 1 2 This court was established shortly after World War II, for crimes committed in WW II. 145 were sentenced to death, but only 42 were executed. Some of those executions were done by firing squad.

External links

Media related to Death penalty in the Netherlands at Wikimedia Commons

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