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LONDON (AP) Timothy McVeigh's execution by U.S. authorities
drew sharp denunciations Monday from traditional critics of the
death penalty, especially in Europe but some of those watching
from elsewhere around the world said the punishment fit the crime.
Amnesty International, the London-based human rights group that
has long led an international crusade against capital punishment,
called the execution of McVeigh convicted of blowing up the
federal building in Oklahoma City six years ago, killing 168 people
a "failure of human rights leadership at the highest levels of government" in the United States.
"The U.S.A ... has allowed vengeance to triumph over justice,"
Amnesty said in a statement.
At the hour of McVeigh's execution, it was the top story on many
national TV networks across the globe. In Italy, state RAI
television opened its hourly newscast at 2 p.m. 8 a.m. EDT by
telling viewers McVeigh would receive a lethal injection at any moment.
In Europe, where there is widespread opposition to the death
penalty and the practice is outlawed by the 15-nation European
Union the execution was almost universally viewed with distaste.
"Assassination of an Assassin," the French left-leaning
newspaper Liberation headlined, with a full-page photo of McVeigh
on its cover. The German mass-circulation Bild said it had "no
pity" for McVeigh, but in an editorial argued strongly against the death penalty.
"Even justified killing makes us murderers," it said. "No one
can be master over life and death ... we must say no to the
avenging beast in us."
In Israel, where news of the ongoing violence with the
Palestinians dominates the headlines and the airwaves, the
execution garnered very little attention. It was far down in the
list of hourly headlines on Israel radio, which is listened to
avidly throughout the country.
A small group of protesters staged an anti-death-penalty
demonstration outside the U.S. Embassy. The Vatican, which speaks
out strongly against capital punishment, had no immediate comment
on the execution.
Some, however, said the death penalty was justified.
"I agree with the decision to execute him," said Bruce Kao, a
technician in Taipei. "I believe in an eye for an eye, a tooth fora tooth."
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