AMN /
While opposing death sentense,Bharatiya Janata Party MP Varun Gandhi has said that most of the death row convicts in India are Dalits or from the minority community.

In an article titled “The Noose Casts A Shameful Shadow,” he said: “75 percent of the convicts on death row belong to the socially and economically marginalised classes; 94 percent of death row convicts are Dalits or from the minorities.

“The poor consistently get the short end of the legal stick. The death penalty is a consequence of poor legal representation and institutional bias. The gallows remain a poor man’s trap,” he added.
Pitching for abolition of death penalty, Gandhi, an MP from Uttar Pradesh’s Sultanpur, contended that “society can be protected from miscreants, criminals and terrorists through less disproportionate means that preserve our dignity, values and institutions”.

He also termed the hangman a disgrace to any civilized society.

“Beyond its ethics, a basic unpredictability makes capital punishment a social evil,” he said, stressing that India, as one of the 58-odd countries where death penalty is retained, needs to recognise the changing global scenario.

“The death penalty is not just a remedy available at the disposal of the law, but a human rights issue, beyond the pale of law. For the largest democracy, the death penalty is an anomaly. It needs correction. Many that live do deserve death. And some that die deserve life. One must not be too eager to deal out death in judgement,” he said.