Alabama Execution by Nitrogen Gas
In Alabama, USA, there’s a stir over the execution of a convicted murderer using nitrogen gas. The White House has expressed concern about administering death in this manner. Meanwhile, the United Nations Human Rights Organization has criticized it, labeling it as ruthless.
The White House voiced concern over the method of death, stating that the use of nitrogen gas is troubling. We are deeply saddened and disturbed by this. While lethal injection is used for executions in the United States, Alabama, Oklahoma, and Mississippi have provisions for executing death by nitrogen gas. Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall defended the decision to execute Kenneth Smith using nitrogen gas, saying it was done professionally, and they will continue using this method for future executions.
Kenneth Smith had been sentenced to death in 1988 for murdering a pastor’s wife by shooting her. On Thursday, Kenneth received the death penalty by inhaling nitrogen gas through a facemask. Witnesses present during Kenneth’s execution described it as extremely gruesome. They revealed that Kenneth struggled for a few minutes after inhaling nitrogen gas, then took heavy breaths before succumbing to death. The entire process took about five minutes.
Volker Turk, the head of the United Nations Human Rights Organization, expressed concern about the use of nitrogen gas for executing death, labeling it as inhumane and cruel. The organization’s spokesperson, Ravina Shamdasani, called for a halt to the death penalty and stated that such methods are wrong even in the 21st century. The European Union also criticized this method of death, asserting that no one should be subjected to such a form of execution.
Kenneth Smith was convicted in 1988 of conspiring with his accomplice John Parker to murder Elizabeth Senate, the pastor’s wife. Elizabeth’s husband had offered the bounty for the murder. John Parker had already been executed by lethal injection in 2010. In November 2022, there was an attempt to execute Kenneth using the same method, but due to the unavailability of veins for injection, his death penalty was postponed at that time.
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