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Capital Punishment


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Australia Changes its Position on the Death Penalty
On 16 February 2003 the Australian PM said in a Sunday morning television interview that the Bali bombers "should be dealt with in accordance with Indonesian law. Â…and if [the death penalty] is what the law of Indonesia provides, well, that is how things should proceed. There won't be any protest from Australia".[1]
In early March 2003 the PM told US television that he would welcome the death penalty for Osama Bin Laden. "I think everybody would", Mr Howard said.[2]
In response to these comments:
"Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said Australia would not intervene if bin Laden was to be executed. 'I personsally have never supported the death penalty buit int he case of Osama bin Laden, I don't think that too many years would be shed if he was executed, bearing in mind all the people he's responsible for killing." [3]
These comments mark a significant change in Australia's attitude to the death penalty and a further......

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Approximate Word Count: 787
Approximate Pages: 4 (260 words per double-spaced page)

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