State of Kuwait (Kuwait)
Methods of Execution
Number of Individuals On Death Row
Approximately 54.
The last available figure for death row dates to the end of 2015, when there were at least 11 death-sentenced prisoners. Since then, there have been a total of 98 new death sentences (34 in 2018, 15 in 2017, 49 in 2016 ), 36 commutations (14 in 2018, 17 in 2017, five in 2016 ), ten exonerations (three in 2018, two in 2017, five in 2016 ), two pardons in 2018, and seven executions in 2017. We therefore estimate there are around 54 people on death row.
(This question was last updated on May 30, 2019.).
Annual Number of Reported Executions in Last Decade
Does the country’s constitution mention capital punishment?
Offenses Punishable by Death
Other Offenses Resulting in Death.
A number of offenses resulting in death are punishable by death. Torture of an accused, a witness or expert, by a public servant and resulting in death, “shall be” punished by death. Giving false witness, resulting in execution, is punishable by death or life imprisonment. For piracy resulting in death, the punishment “will be death.” The punishment “shall be death” for attacking or resisting drug law enforcement or public servant carrying out his duties under the drug laws, resulting in death.
Terrorism-Related Offenses Resulting in Death.
Attacks on or interference with transportation or communications, with the goal of harming people or property, resulting in death is punishable by death or life imprisonment. Anyone who uses explosives with the goal of killing, spreading fear or destroying certain sites “shall be punished by death.” Buildings or utilities belonging to the government or to groups in which there is government ownership or a public interest, places of worship, areas where masses of people have gathered, or residential buildings are among those sites covered by the law.
Terrorism-Related Offenses Not Resulting in Death.
Anyone who uses or plans to use explosives with the goal of killing, spreading fear or destroying certain sites “shall be punished by death.” Buildings or utilities belonging to the government or to groups in which there is government ownership or a public interest, places of worship, areas where masses of people have gathered, or residential buildings are among those sites covered by the law.
Rape Not Resulting in Death.
Intercourse by force, threat or deception is punishable by death; rape carries the death penalty when by a relation, guardian or servant. Statutory rape of a woman unable to consent because she is mentally incapacitated carries the death penalty when carried out by a relation, guardian or servant. Statutory rape of a girl under the age of 16 carries the death penalty when carried out by a relation, guardian or servant.
Drug Trafficking Not Resulting in Death.
Treason.
Drug trafficking “shall be punished by death or life imprisonment,” the penalty “shall be death” for recidivists, public officials, those who use individuals under the age of 18 in carrying out an offense, if the criminal has created a criminal organization, or as specified for certain drugs in a schedule to the law.
Other Offenses Not Resulting in Death.
A number of military offenses of Kuwaiti personnel are death-eligible under some circumstances, such as cowardice, dereliction of duty, insubordination, insurrection, disclosing secrets, assisting the enemy, undermining the defense, and some humanitarian violations and offenses set out in the Penal Code. Enemy soldiers can be punished by death for operating in disguise or violating international law.
Does the country have a mandatory death penalty?
Under Article 83 of the Penal Code, if the circumstances of the crime or facts about the offender (such as his past, character or age) call for leniency, an individual may be sentenced to a term of years; the law does not restrict the application of this discretion. Thus, for most offenses, the death penalty is not mandatory in Kuwait. However, Kuwait’s anti-terrorism law prohibits application of mitigation for terrorism resulting in death. Some sources list the death penalty as mandatory for drug trafficking, but we did not find a similar provision in the drug laws excluding the consideration of mitigating circumstances.
Some sources list the death penalty as mandatory for drug trafficking, but—in contrast to the anti-terrorism law—we did not find a provision in the drug laws excluding the consideration of mitigating circumstances.
Reports indicate that Kuwaiti courts, in exercising discretion, can be influenced by a payment of blood money compensation to a victim’s family, but the law does not state that courts cannot exercise discretion if there is no such settlement. A discussion on the web page of the Embassy of the Philippines indicates that courts follow a Shari’a practices in sentencing for premeditated murder, which could include applying a mandatory death penalty in absence of a settlement with the victim’s family.
Which offenses carry a mandatory death sentence, if any?
Comments.
Reports indicate that Kuwaiti courts, in exercising discretion, can be influenced by a payment of blood money compensation to a victim’s family, but the law does not state that courts cannot exercise discretion if there is no such settlement. A discussion on the web page of the Embassy of the Philippines indicates that courts follow a Shari’a practices in sentencing for premeditated murder, which could include applying a mandatory death penalty in absence of a settlement with the victim’s family.
Categories of Offenders Excluded From the Death Penalty
Women With Small Children.
Reporting before the U.N. Human Rights Council indicates that the death penalty is not applied to new mothers. This could be the result of a related law prohibiting the death penalty for a pregnant woman who gives birth to a live child. Also, Kuwait has acceded to the Arab Charter on Human Rights, which prohibits the execution of nursing mothers.
Mentally Ill.
Proceedings may be suspended for individuals who are mentally unfit to stand trial. A court may find that a defendant has diminished responsibility due to mental illness at the time of the offense, or may acquit the defendant. There is no indication, however, that the law prohibits the execution of individuals who have become insane while awaiting execution of their death sentence."
Offenses For Which Individuals Have Been Executed In the Last Decade
Does the country’s constitution make reference to international law?
ICCPR
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
Date of Signature
Not Applicable.
First Optional Protocol to the ICCPR, Recognizing Jurisdiction of the Human Rights Committee
Date of Signature
Not Applicable.
Date of Accession
Not Applicable.
ACHR
American Convention on Human Rights (ACHR)
ACHR Party?
ACHR Signed?
Death Penalty Protocol to the ACHR
DPP to ACHR Party?
DPP to ACHR Signed?
ACHPR
African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (ACHPR)
ACHPR Party?
ACHPR Signed?
Protocol to the ACHPR on the Rights of Women in Africa
ACHPR Women Party?
ACHPR Women Signed?
African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child
ACHPR Child Party?
ACHPR Child Signed?
Arab Charter on Human Rights
Comments and Decisions of the U.N. Human Rights System
The Human Rights Committee pursuant to periodic review of human rights in Kuwait issued Concluding Observations and Recommendations in 2000; the Committee urged Kuwait to limit the application of the death penalty to the most serious crimes, address the vagueness of the scope of some death-eligible offenses, and assure the right to a fair trial for individuals facing capital charges.
Comments and Decisions of Regional Human Rights Systems
Members of the Human Rights Council pursuant to Universal Periodic Review of human rights in Kuwait made observations and recommendations: Kuwait supported the recommendation that it meet minimum standards in the application of the death penalty, particularly regarding restriction of the death penalty to the most serious crimes; Kuwait did not support recommendations that it establish a moratorium on the death penalty, prolong a moratorium on executions or consider abolishing the death penalty de jure.
Availability of Lawyers for Indigent Defendants at Trial
Yes. The U.S. Department of State reports that bar association attorneys are required to assist indigent defendants when requested by the court and that the defendants used these services. The law indicates that bar association attorneys are required to represent indigent individuals by order of the court and that the court may determine their state-funded compensation and fine attorneys who do not comply.
Availability of Lawyers for Indigent Defendants on Appeal
The U.S. Department of State reports that bar association attorneys are required to assist indigent defendants when requested by the court and that the defendants used these services. The law indicates that bar association attorneys are required to represent indigent individuals by order of the court and that the court may determine their state-funded compensation; our reading of the law is that this might continue until judgment is final.
Quality of Legal Representation
None.
Appellate Process
Serious criminal cases are submitted to a higher court for automatic review. We do not know whether an intermediate Court of Appeal hears a capital case before it proceeds to cassation review by the Supreme Court. A capital defendant might be permitted to petition the Constitutional Court to resolve a question of constitutional law involved in the defendant’s case, or to ask for a review of the earnestness of his defense.
Military courts, which except in times of martial law can adjudicate only as to military crimes committed by military personnel, have a separate system of trial, appeal and cassation.
Capital cases involving terrorism-related offenses that, prior to 1995, fell under the jurisdiction of the State Security Courts (which have now been abolished), are now tried in ordinary criminal courts; they are reviewed by a cassation court but not by the Court of Appeal.
Clemency Process
A death sentence cannot be executed without the approval of the Emir, who without legal restriction may issue a pardon or commute a sentence. Reports indicate that Kuwaiti law follows the practice of reducing sentences for murder offenses in return for blood money compensation paid to a murder victim’s family, and this is an important part of the clemency process. We found a report that the Emir has granted clemency to a condemned individual, indicating that upon a settlement with the victim’s family, he might further reduce the penalty.
Where Are Death-Sentenced Prisoners incarcerated?
Description of Prison Conditions
We have found no reports that specifically describe conditions on death row. The U.S. Department of State reports that conditions in general have improved for inmates due to the construction of new prisons in 2006. However, sanitation and lack of sufficient medical staff are problems, as reported by NGOs visiting prison facilities. Also, “authorities reportedly mistreated prisoners and failed to prevent inmate-on-inmate violence.” Prisons are slightly over capacity. Migrants are housed in the separate Talha Deportation Center, which reportedly provides adequate nutrition and medical services. The report does not specify whether migrants are held at this center facing or convicted of capital charges.
Foreign Nationals Known to Be on Death Row
What are the nationalities of the known foreign nationals on death row?
One researcher reports that Saudi nationals and others are on death row; an Amnesty International report indicates that one Filipina maid may still be on death row (typically, Amnesty would issue an update if her situation had changed); news reports confirm that Filipina workers are currently sentenced to death in Kuwait with some frequency.
Women Known to Be on Death Row
Yes.
On January 25, 2010 Amnesty International issued an urgent action request for letters appealing for clemency on behalf of a Filipina maid whose death sentence was confirmed by the Court of Cassation on January 19, 2010. We found no further information on her status. However, Kuwait pronounces death sentences upon female migrant domestic workers with some regularity, often amid claims that they had been abused by their victims. It should be acknowledged that the Emir has commuted such death sentences on more than one occasion, although we do not know how frequently he intervenes.
Juvenile Offenders Known to Be on Death Row
Racial / Ethnic Composition of Death Row
Reports indicate a potential problem in death sentences pronounced on female domestic migrant workers who kill their employers or members of their employers’ families after allegedly being subjected to abusive conditions. Negotiation by the governments of foreign nationals may be a significant factor in whether a migrant worker is executed in such cases. Historically, most executions in Kuwait are of foreigners.
Recent Developments in the Application of the Death Penalty
Yes.
Commentary in the final report of the working group on the Human Rights Council’s Universal Periodic Review of human rights in Kuwait suggests that an unofficial moratorium on executions has been in place since the last execution in 2007; however, Kuwait’s commitment to that moratorium may be limited. Kuwait reports that its courts have restricted application of the death penalty to the most serious crimes, but its last execution (in 2007) was for drug trafficking. The years immediately prior to 2007 had seen an upsurge in executions, a significant portion of which were executions of foreigners for drug trafficking offenses.
Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
2020 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
2018 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
2016 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
2014 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
2012 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
2010 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
2008 Record of Votes on the UN General Assembly Moratorium Resolution
Member(s) of World Coalition Against the Death Penalty
None.
Other Groups and Individuals Engaged in Death Penalty Advocacy
Reprieve
PO Box 72054
London EC3P 3BZ
United Kingdom
Tel 020 7553 8140
Fax 020 7553 8189
info@reprieve.org.uk
http://www.reprieve.org.uk.
Where are judicial decisions reported?
Helpful Reports and Publications
The general legal resource of the Gulf Corporation Council (http://www.gcc-legal.org/MojPortalPublic/Home.aspx) has been helpful in researching the laws of its Members. Our use of this database was supported by a translator through the WCADP.
Additional notes regarding this country
None.