Washington: A US Muslim man on death row won a last-minute stay of execution when a federal court ruled that his constitutional rights had been violated because the state of Alabama refused to provide an imam to accompany him into the death chamber.
The federal appeals court, headquartered in Atlanta, granted the stay of execution Wednesday to 42-year-old Domineque Ray, who was scheduled to die Thursday for the rape and murder of a 15-year-old girl in 1995.
“The central constitutional problem here is that the state has regularly placed a Christian cleric in the execution room to minister to the needs of Christian inmates, but has refused to provide the same benefit to a devout Muslim and all other non-Christians,” the judges said in their ruling.
The First Amendment of the US Constitution forbids public authorities from favouring one religion over another, or from preventing the free practice of faith.
As his execution date approached, Ray, who converted to Islam while in prison, demanded the right to be escorted to the death chamber by an imam.
Ray’s lawyers filed an emergency challenge to the ruling last week, but it was denied by a lower court, which argued that Alabama could not allow ‘the risk posed by allowing another cleric into the execution chamber’.
But the appeals court said that Alabama had presented no evidence of any such security risk, so why it would be a problem to train an imam in prison protocol in time for the execution.
The state of Alabama announced after the ruling that it would take its case to the Supreme Court.
AFP