Russian Federation (Russia)
Retentionist or Abolitionist De Facto
Year of Last Known Execution
Methods of Execution
Number of Individuals On Death Row
Annual Number of Reported Executions in Last Decade
Executions in 2022
Executions in 2012
Is there an official moratorium on executions?
Yes. In 1996, the year it became a member of the Council of Europe, the Russian Federation adopted a moratorium on executions, imposed by then-President Boris Yeltsin in order to comply with Russia’s international commitments, namely the ratification of Protocol No. 6 to the European Convention on Human Rights Concerning the Abolition of the Death Penalty, within three years of joining the Council of Europe. The Chechen Republic evidenced some unwillingness to comply with the moratorium, but the moratorium has been followed by all republics in the Federation since 1999.
In 1999, the Constitutional Court determined that the Federation had not yet ensured that safeguards regarding the application of the death penalty were in place, and instituted a judicial moratorium on the death penalty. In 2009, after reform of the judicial system (primarily access to jury trials) was completed and ready to start operating in all regions by January 1, 2010, the Constitutional Court revisited the issue and determined that the application of capital punishment could not be reinstated because the moratorium is related to international commitments of the Federation. In fact, abolition of the death penalty had been one of the conditions of the country’s accession to the Council of Europe and Russia was still in the ratification process of Protocol No. 6. Additionally, the court held (or implied) that the Federation’s move towards abolition was “irreversible.” Some justices on the Court were reported to be influenced by the Federation’s international obligations (as required by the Constitution) or voluntary acknowledgement of the customs of Europe.
Does the country’s constitution mention capital punishment?
Article 20 of the Constitution provides that “[everyone] shall have the right to life;” furthermore, “[capital] punishment may, until its abolition, be instituted by federal law as exceptional punishment for especially grave crimes against life, with the accused having the right to have his case considered in a law court by jury.”
Offenses Punishable by Death
Other Offenses Not Resulting in Death.
An attempt on the life of any professional or employee engaged in the criminal justice system (including law enforcement), for the purpose of revenge or to interfere with law enforcement or an investigation or the administration of justice, is punishable by death. An attempt on the life of a statesman to terminate his or her government or political activity or out of revenge for such activity is punishable by death (and may be considered a terrorist act).
Comments.
The new Criminal Code of 1996, which came into force just after Russia became a Member State of Council of Europe, considerably reduced the number of crimes punishable with death.
While Article 66 of the Criminal Code prohibits capital punishment for an attempted crime, Article 59 allows the death penalty for especially grave crimes of “attempt on the life”. Several articles apply the death penalty for specific instances of “attempt on the life or similar crimes, but also provide for a range of lesser penalties. These “attempts on the life” may be a category of attempt in which the commission of certain criminal acts with the ultimate intent of harming the person or life of certain individuals is in itself a death-eligible offense. We do not know whether courts interpret Article 66 to limit the death penalty for encroachment to cases in which a life is taken.
Does the country have a mandatory death penalty?
Which offenses carry a mandatory death sentence, if any?
Categories of Offenders Excluded From the Death Penalty
Offenses For Which Individuals Have Been Executed In the Last Decade
Have there been any significant published cases concerning the death penalty in national courts?
Yes. The most significant recent cases were decided on February 2, 1999 and November 19, 2009 by the Constitutional Court. In 1999, the Court enforced a moratorium on the death penalty due to the lack of constitutional safeguards regarding its application (namely, lack of jury trials available in all republics of the Federation); in 2009, the Court extended the moratorium, observing that even though the Russian Federation had put a jury system in place in all of its regions, questions about the Federation’s international commitments precluded application of the death penalty. The Court may have been influenced by the constitutional requirement that the Federation progress towards abolition as well as the constitutional requirement that the Federation’s courts observe international obligations and customary law regarding human rights. European law excludes the death penalty in peacetime and abolition of the death penalty had been one of the conditions of the country’s accession to the Council of Europe in 1996.
Does the country’s constitution make reference to international law?
Article 15(4) of the Constitution provides that “[the] commonly recognized principles and norms of the international law and the international treaties of the Russian Federation shall be a component part of its legal system. If an international treaty of the Russian Federation stipulates rules other than those stipulated by the law, the rules of the international treaty shall apply.” As a check against the possibility that an international treaty could undermine rights or other guarantees of the Constitution, Article 125(6) empowers the Constitutional Court to nullify international agreements that violate the Constitution.
Regarding individuals, the Constitution establishes that “[in] conformity with the international treaties of the Russian Federation, everyone shall have the right to turn to interstate organs concerned with the protection of human rights and liberties when all the means of legal protection within the state have been exhausted.”
ICCPR
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
First Optional Protocol to the ICCPR, Recognizing Jurisdiction of the Human Rights Committee
Date of Signature
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
Arab Charter on Human Rights
Arab Charter Party?
Arab Charter Signed?
Comments and Decisions of the U.N. Human Rights System
The Human Rights Committee in its 2009 periodic review of human rights in the Russian Federation recommended that Russia abolish the death penalty.
In March 2011, the Human Rights Committee found a violation of art. 6, in conjunction with arts. 7(1), 9(2),(3), (4) and 14(1), (3), a), b), d) and g), of the ICCPR, in that the Russian Federation had imposed a death sentence following a trial held in violation of several fair trial guarantees, and where the defendant’s allegations of ill-treatment by the police during his arrest had been ignored. The case dated back to 1995, before Russia entered the Council of Europe and established a moratorium on the death penalty; the individual’s death sentence had been commuted to life imprisonment by the 1999 presidential commutation of death sentences.
Comments and Decisions of Regional Human Rights Systems
Members of the Human Rights Council, in the 2009 Universal Periodic Review of human rights in the Russian Federation, recommended that Russia abolish the death penalty. In response, the Russian delegation stated that complete abolition and its accession to Protocol No. 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights and to the Second Optional Protocol of the ICCPR would “be considered once the appropriate changes have been made to domestic legislation.” It added that in accordance with its constitution, it “strives towards abolishing the death penalty on the [sic] step by step basis.” Russia chose to delay its answer to the recommendations that it abolish the death penalty de jure and institute a moratorium on executions. The only answer it later provided was that complete abolition “would depend on the prevailing view in Russian society on abolition.”
The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has repeatedly urged the Russian Federation to comply with its obligation to abolish death penalty in law and to ratify Protocol No. 6 to the European Convention on Human Rights.
Availability of Lawyers for Indigent Defendants at Trial
Availability of Lawyers for Indigent Defendants on Appeal
Under Article 48 of the Constitution and Articles 51(5) and 364(3)(4) of the Criminal Procedure Code, individuals are guaranteed the right to competent legal counsel at the state’s expense when facing capital charges, including during the appeals process. In practice, this right may sometimes be ignored.
Quality of Legal Representation
In its 2007 concluding observations and recommendations pursuant to state party reporting, the U.N. Committee Against Torture expressed concern that torture, a lack of respect for the right to counsel, secret detention and unfair trials were serious problems. Additionally, human rights defenders and journalists who spoke out on these topics suffered severe reprisals, possibly at the hands of state authorities. Reprisals were associated with those accused of serious offenses. Such reprisals undermine effective representation. Leandro Despouy, the Human Rights Council’s Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, observed that a failure to understand the role of defense attorneys in the justice system and interference by the executive has undermined the public’s confidence in the administration of justice.
Appellate Process
Any party or his representative, or a victim’s representative, may file a criminal appeal against conviction or acquittal. A petitioner may file before a statutory (district) court/ appeal court or the cassation court (Supreme Court). Courts of appeal or cassation may consider only legality, substantiation, and the justness of the sentence; while cassation courts may mitigate the sentence, aggravation of the sentence is not permitted. An acquittal can be reversed if it is shown that the prosecutor was wrongfully prevented from presenting proof or from submitting proper questions to the jury. The Criminal Procedure Code describes the applicable rules during the appeals process in minute detail.
Clemency Process
Upon pronouncement of a capital sentence, the court must inform the sentenced person of his right to seek clemency. Under Article 89 of the Constitution, the President has the prerogative of mercy. Under Article 59(3) of the Criminal Code, by way of pardon capital punishment may be replaced with imprisonment for life or by imprisonment for a term of 25 years. Currently, courts in federated Russian states are prohibited from sentencing individuals to death.
Availability of jury trials
Yes. Under Article 20 of the Constitution, a capital defendant is guaranteed the right to trial by jury. The Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation ruled in 1999 that the death penalty could not be used until jury trials had been introduced in all of Russia’s 89 regions and suspended the possibility of carrying out capital sentences from 1999-2009 due to time required for that implementation. At the end of 2009, when the Chechen region had made the necessary reforms and jury trials would be able to start operating in all regions of Russia by January 1, 2010, the Constitutional Court extended this moratorium due to other human rights considerations.
Systemic Challenges in the Criminal Justice System
In its 2007 concluding observations and recommendations pursuant to state party reporting, the U.N. Committee Against Torture expressed concern that police abuse and torture of detainees was reportedly a serious problem and that the right to counsel was not always respected. Individuals accused of serious crimes did not always receive fair trials, and human rights defenders and journalists who spoke out on these topics suffered severe reprisals, possibly at the hands of state authorities. In high-profile cases, the judiciary may be influenced by the executive and widespread corruption is reported. Leandro Despouy, the Human Rights Council’s Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, commented that the Russian Federation’s legal framework had been significantly improved but required time and continuing reform to fully realize the Federation’s aim of creating a fully independent judiciary that protects the citizenry’s fundamental rights.
Where Are Death-Sentenced Prisoners incarcerated?
Description of Prison Conditions
No one is held under sentence of death in the Russian Federation. In 1999, all death sentences were commuted. In 1999, the Constitutional Court issued a ruling temporarily eliminating the possibility of carrying out death sentences; this ruling is still in effect. Although the death penalty is not pronounced or imposed, individuals are still convicted of serious crimes. In general, prison conditions in the Russian Federation are harsh and can be life-threatening; most prisoners are held in labor colonies, and torture, intentional deprivation of food, denial of necessary medical care and disregard for the safety of prisoners from other prisoners is common. The Federal Service for the Execution of Sentences of the Russian Federation’s Ministry of Justice estimated that 41% of those in the federal prison system had some type of illness, although the General Prosecutor''s Office stated that as many as 90% have health problems; significant percentages had mental disorders, tuberculosis, HIV and other serious illnesses. Juveniles are sometimes held with adults. A 2007 report of the U.N. Committee Against Torture loosely corroborates that conditions for detainees in the Russian Federation are severe. Since 2010, the President has been taking action to reduce the chronic overcrowding by granting pardons and promoting alternative punishment for lesser crimes. In its last periodic report to the U.N. Committee Against Torture, Russia announced that its Government has approved, in October 2010, an “Outline for the development of the penal correction system until 2020”, aiming at implementing a “new system in conformity with international standards for the treatment of detained and convicted persons.” This reform is to take place in three phases over the period up to 2020. The European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) has been carrying out visits to Russian Federation’s places of detention yearly; the reports on the facts found during the visits, containing conclusions and recommendations, serve as basis for an ongoing dialogue between the CPT and the national authorities, but they remain confidential as of March 2012 (their publication depends on the authorization of the State Party concerned).
Foreign Nationals Known to Be on Death Row
What are the nationalities of the known foreign nationals on death row?
Women Known to Be on Death Row
No. Women cannot be sentenced to death. Furthermore, no one is held under sentence of death in the Russian Federation. In 1999, all death sentences were commuted. In 1999, the Constitutional Court issued a ruling temporarily eliminating the possibility of death sentences and executions; this ruling is still in effect.
Juvenile Offenders Known to Be on Death Row
No. Individuals under the age of 18 at the time of the crime cannot be sentenced to death. Moreover, no one is held under sentence of death in the Russian Federation. In 1999, all death sentences were commuted. In 1999, the Constitutional Court issued a ruling temporarily eliminating the possibility of death sentences and executions; this ruling is still in effect. Individuals under the age of 18 at the time of the crime cannot be sentenced to death.
Racial / Ethnic Composition of Death Row
No one is held under sentence of death in the Russian Federation. In 1999, all death sentences were commuted. In 1999, the Constitutional Court issued a ruling temporarily eliminating the possibility of death sentences and executions; this ruling is still in effect. Reports and the origin of cases from which the Court’s death penalty jurisprudence has emanated do suggest that the Chechen Republic is a flashpoint for death penalty issues, or at least that the Chechen Republic was the sole republic still executing in 1999 despite a Presidential moratorium.
Recent Developments in the Application of the Death Penalty
There has been a judicial moratorium on the death penalty in place since 1999; in November 2009, the Constitutional Court extended this moratorium due to questions about the Russian Federation’s obligations under treaty and customary law and due to its constitutional mandate to progress towards abolition.
Russia has not acceded to Protocol No. 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights or the Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR, which both concern the abolition of the death penalty. While it voted in favor of the U.N. General Assembly’s proposal to institute a universal moratorium on executions, it also stated to the U.N. Human Rights Council that abolition “would depend on the prevailing view in Russian society on abolition.”
In 2008, the Legislation Committee of the Duma (Russian Parliament) presented a bill regarding “the abolition of the death penalty in the Russian Federation”, but it has not been enacted.
Following the terrorist attacks of March 2010 and January 2011 in Moscow, politicians have showed lack of will to abolish the death penalty in law; and the Duma’s spokesman was reported to have said that the ratification of the Protocol is unlikely to take place against public opinion (surveys show that the majority of Russians support the death penalty).
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
None.
Where are judicial decisions reported?
Supreme Court and Constitutional Court decisions can be accessed at: http://www.vsrf.ru/index.php. The resource is in Russian.
Helpful Reports and Publications
None.
Additional notes regarding this country
The Russian Federation became a Member of the Council of Europe in 1996. As a condition of accession to the organization, it committed itself to abolishing the death penalty and to ratifying Protocol No. 6 to the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms Concerning the Abolition of the Death Penalty (allowing for exceptions for acts committed in time of war or of imminent threat of war), within three years of joining the Council. Although Russia ratified the Convention, it only signed the Protocol (in April 6, 1997) and the ratification process is still pending. Russia is the only Member State of the Council of Europe which has not ratified this Protocol. It is also one of the few Member States that is not a party to Protocol no. 13 to the Convention, Concerning the Abolition of the Death Penalty in All Circumstances .
In 2008, the Legislation Committee of the Duma (Russian Parliament) presented a bill regarding “the abolition of the death penalty in the Russian Federation”, but it has not been enacted. Following the terrorist attacks of March 2010 and January 2011 in Moscow, politicians have showed lack of will to abolish the death penalty in law; and the Duma’s spokesman was reported to have said that the ratification of the Protocol is unlikely to take place against public opinion (surveys show that the majority of Russians support the death penalty).
The Constitutional Court has enforced a moratorium on the pronouncement and execution of death sentences; thus, defendants do not face capital charges. Nevertheless, enforcement of minimum human rights protections in the criminal justice system is seriously lacking, retaliation against human rights defenders and independent journalists is common and those facing serious criminal charges lack adequate safeguards in the provision of a fair investigative process and trial and may be subjected to lengthy incarceration under life-threatening conditions. While reforms have created a structure appropriate for strong, independent courts that protect human rights, justices have not fully adjusted to the new system; furthermore, a failure to understand the role of defense attorneys has undermined the effectiveness of the system and executive interference with the judiciary has undermined the public’s confidence in the administration of justice.