Capital punishment

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Capital punishment, also known as the death penalty, is the state-sanctioned practice of killing a person as a punishment for a crime. The sentence ordering that an offender is to be punished in such a manner is known as a death sentence, and the act of carrying out the sentence is known as łајаłьен (rajarqen) /ɹajaɹqen/, an execution. Crimes that are punishable by death are known as capital crimes, off which Illte has only two; for usury, and for unlawful suffering.

For more general info check out Capital punishment on Wikipedia

Usury

Usury, the act of earning money on money, also known as interest, was outlawed by King Zara in 398 a.Q. The act of usury was the first law to introduce capital punishment as a mandatory sentence for a prescribed crime.

The reason for making usury a capital crime was that usury made the debtor a virtual slave to the creditor. While being in debt, a debtor would have to serve the creditor with regular payments until the debt was paid off, with interest. If anything would happen to the debtor while serving the creditor, the repercussions for the debtor's family could be sever. In worst cases a debtor's family would risk starvation and death.

The enactment of this Act put a final end to the civil war, as the reason for the bloodshed, usury, disappeared.

Note that while the act of usury banned the act of earning money on money, it does not make it illegal for a debtor to donate an additional sum to the creditor, as a sign of good will, though this practice became obsolete with the digital revolution.

Unlawful Suffering

The act of unlawful suffering was the second law to make capital punishment mandatory. The law was enacted in 421 a.Q by King Zara.

The act describes unlawful suffering as any action, where one by action, or by inaction, causes any inhabitant of Illte to endure suffering beyond what one must naturally expect of life. Unlike The act of usury, this description is left vague by design as it is impossible to construct an exact method of measuring what constitutes suffering beyond what one must naturally expect from life. One thing that can be certain is that this act makes torture a capital crime.

Torture

Torture, the act of inflicting severe pain or suffering on a person as punishment, for the purpose of extracting information or a confession, or to intimidate a subject, is clearly outlawed by The act of unlawful suffering. As a minimum one can assume that the use of methods such as corporal punishment, mutilation, and electroshock are included within this concept.

Harassment

Harassment, the act of regularly intimidating, degrade, and demean someone, by speech, both verbal and written, for the purpose of eliminating the victim as a living being, locally or permanently, can also easily be considered to be causing suffering beyond what one must naturally expect of life.

Since there are no age limit set in the act, and the Courts of Law consider anyone who has the status of Fuqnan to be able to know the difference between right and wrong, school bullying would also be considered as being unlawful suffering, and thus subject to capital punishment.

Rape

Rape, сілагаłі (zilagari) /zila:gaɹi/, the act of forcing a serious sexual relation with another person, may also be considered as constituting unlawful suffering, depending on circumstances and pain involved during the action. For obvious reasons, just watching a couple conducting a serious sexual relation in public, while still violating the rape clause of The Freedom of Sex in The natural rights, does not constitute unlawful suffering.

As age, for obvious reasons, does increase the amount of pain involved during the action, up to and including mutilation of the sexual organs due to the action, the younger the victim, the greater the chance of the action constituting unlawful suffering.

Repeated offences will also add up to having caused unlawful suffering, whether it being a single victim or multiple victims.

Murder

Other consequences of the act