60ème session du Conseil des droits de l’homme de l’ONU : déclaration conjointe sur la peine de mort et la politique en matière de drogues

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60ème session du Conseil des droits de l’homme de l’ONU : déclaration conjointe sur la peine de mort et la politique en matière de drogues

20 octobre 2025
Harm Reduction International (HRI)

L’IDPC se joint à des dirigeants mondiaux pour présenter une déclaration conjointe condamnant la peine de mort pour les infractions liées aux drogues, saluant les réformes récentes et appelant à des changements plus profonds. Pour en savoir plus, en anglais, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous.

During the General Debate of Item 3 at the 60th session of the Human Rights Council, Harm Reduction International, jointly with ACAT-Liberia, International Bar Association's Human Rights Institute, Dejusticia, HAYAT, ELEMENTA, International Drug Policy Consortium, Dianova International, Parliamentarian for Global Action, Amnesty International, International Network of People Who Use Drugs, and EHRA delivered a statement highlighting the state of the death penalty for drug offences and the need for drug policy reform as part of the abolition advocacy.

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Excellencies, distinguished delegates,

The co-signatories of this statement welcome the reports calling on States to refrain from imposing the death penalty for drug offences—a stance firmly grounded in international human rights law and standards, which limit this punishment to the ‘most serious crimes’. Drug offences fall outside this threshold.

Yet, in 2024 alone, at least 615 individuals, likely many more, were executed for drug offences worldwide—marking a dramatic 32% increase over the previous year—and accounting for nearly 40% of all confirmed global executions.

Iran remains at the epicentre of this crisis, being responsible for 79% of all known drug-related executions in 2024. Most alarmingly, Saudi Arabia recorded a staggering 122 executions—marking a 6,000% increase. It signals a renewed and unforgiving commitment to capital punishment as a tool of drug control. Concerningly, both figures are set to be higher by the end of 2025.

This regression is not inevitable. After positive developments in Pakistan and Malaysia in 2023, in June 2025 Vietnam removed the death penalty for certain drug crimes—changes that benefitted, or can benefit, hundreds on death row.

But meaningful progress requires international leadership and drug policy reform. We call on member states to continue to publicly condemn this cruel practice, develop coherent alternatives rooted in public health and human rights, and ensure that no funding for drug control efforts that risk contributing to executions.

Thank you.

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