Capital Punishment in Iraq

Capital punishment in Iraq was commonly used by the government of Saddam Hussein; and has been since his removal from office.

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Capital punishment
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Current use
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Current methods
  • Decapitation
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  • Hanging
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  • Shooting
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  • Nitrogen asphyxiation
Past methods
  • Boiling
  • Breaking wheel
  • Burning
  • Crucifixion
  • Crushing
  • Disembowelment
  • Dismemberment
  • Drawing and quartering
  • Elephant
  • Flaying
  • Immurement
  • Impalement
  • Premature burial
  • Sawing
  • Scaphism
  • Slow slicing
Related topics
  • Crime
  • Death row
  • Last meal
  • Penology

After the invasion of Iraq in 2003, the U.S. administrator, L. Paul Bremer, suspended capital punishment on June 10, declaring that "the former regime used certain provisions of the penal code as a means of oppression, in violation of internationally acknowledged human rights."

On August 8, 2004, capital punishment was reinstated in Iraq. Iraqi law states that no person over the age of 70 can be executed, despite people like Tariq Aziz, sentenced to death at the age of 74. There is an automatic right to appeal on all such sentences. Iraqi Law requires execution within 30 days of all legal avenues being exhausted. The last legal step, before the execution proceeds, is for the condemned to be handed a red card. This is completed by an official of the court with details of the judgment and a notice that execution is imminent.


In September 2005, three murderers were the first people to be executed since the restoration. Then on March 9, 2006, an official of Iraq's Supreme Judicial Council confirmed that Iraqi authorities had executed the first insurgents by hanging.

27 people, including one woman, were executed by the Iraqi government on September 6, 2006, for high crimes against civilians.

At least 285 people were sentenced to death in 2008; at least 34 were executed. In 2007, at least 199 people were sentenced to death and 33 executed, in 2006, at least 65 people were executed. The actual figures could be much higher as there are no available official statistics."

There were at least 120 executions in 2009, overwhelmingly for alleged terrorist offences. More than 900 people, including 17 women, were thought to be at risk of imminent execution in Iraq at the end of 2009 - they had reportedly exhausted all forms of appeal and their death sentences were said to have been ratified by the Presidential Council.

In January, 2012, 34 people were executed in a single day.

Read more about Capital Punishment In Iraq:  Execution of Saddam Hussein

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