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Obituary

Robert Badinter, French minister who ended the guillotine, dies at 95

Robert Badinter, the former justice minister who played a key role in abolishing the death penalty in France in 1981, has died at the age of 95.  

Former French justice minister Robert Badinter in September 2013.
Former French justice minister Robert Badinter in September 2013. © Bertrand Guay / AFP
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Badinter saved many lives by dedicating his own to the fight against capital punishment.

The soft-spoken human rights lawyer, who said he could not abide by a "killer justice system", was widely vilified for pushing through legislation banning the death penalty at a time when a majority of French people still supported it.

"We entered the court by the front door, and once the verdict had been read and the accused's head was safe, we often had to leave by a hidden stairway," he recalled.

Badinter said later he had "never felt so lonely" in fighting capital punishment, which in France was carried out by beheading with the guillotine – a practice dating back to the French Revolution of 1789.

In years to come, however, he would be hailed for his integrity and statesmanship.

"Robert Badinter never stopped pleading for enlightenment," President Emmanuel Macron wrote on social media platform X. 

"He was a person of the century, a man with a republican conscience and a spirit that was French."

Badinter speaks to Mother Teresa during the World symposium on Human Rights and Liberties in May 1985  in Paris.
Badinter speaks to Mother Teresa during the World symposium on Human Rights and Liberties in May 1985 in Paris. © AFP / MICHEL CLEMENT

'Cut in two'   

The son of a Jewish fur trader who died in a Nazi death camp during World War II, Badinter built a reputation as a lawyer for defending – often successfully – notorious cases that his peers didn't dare touch.

His career took a decisive turn in 1972 after one of his clients, Roger Bontems, was beheaded for his secondary role in the murder of a nurse and a guard during a prison escape.

Badinter was haunted by his failure to win a stay on Bontem's execution. In 2005 he told RFI that the case changed his stance on the death penalty – from an "intellectual belief" as a lawyer on the left into a militant.

"It’s one thing to have an intellectual belief and another thing is injustice – to have the jury decide that [Bontems] hadn't killed anybody ... but that both of them should be sent to the guillotine?" he said.

"I saw a man, in the name of justice, cut in pieces. I couldn’t accept this idea of justice. It's the contrary of justice. And from then on I became a militant."

"I saw a man cut into pieces... with no blood on his hands. I couldn't accept this idea of justice. Justice cannot kill."

02:41

Robert Badinter talks to RFI's Imogen Lamb in 2005

Imogen Lamb

Five years later he helped convince a jury not to execute Patrick Henry for the murder of a seven-year-old boy, becoming a hate figure for many French people.

Badinter turned the case into a trial of the death penalty, calling in experts to describe in grisly detail the workings of the guillotine.

"Guillotining is nothing less than taking a living man and cutting him in two," he argued.

He saved six men from execution during his career, eliciting death threats in the process.

France introduced the death penalty through guillotining at the time of the French Revolution. It remained officially in place until the Badinter law ending the death penalty was promulgated on 10 October 1981.
France introduced the death penalty through guillotining at the time of the French Revolution. It remained officially in place until the Badinter law ending the death penalty was promulgated on 10 October 1981. © National Prison Museum of France

No deterrent effect

Badinter was appointed justice minister in president François Mitterrand's Socialist government in June 1981. He made ending the death penalty an immediate priority.

France's last execution had been in 1977 with the death of Hamida Djandoubi – a Tunisian immigrant convicted of torturing and murdering a young woman.

Hamida Djandoubi is led by police officials through a tunnel to the courtroom from the prison in Aix en Provence on 24 February 1977.
Hamida Djandoubi is led by police officials through a tunnel to the courtroom from the prison in Aix en Provence on 24 February 1977. © AFP / GERARD FOUET

Just four months after taking office, Badinter ushered an abolition through parliament with a landmark speech denouncing the "stealthy executions at dawn" that were France's "collective shame".

Demolishing myths about the supposed deterrent effect of the death penalty, he argued: "If fear of death stopped men in their tracks, we would have no great soldiers or sporting figures."

Badinter continued to make history in 1983 when he succeeded in getting Bolivia to extradite Klaus Barbie, a former chief of the Nazis' secret police, the Gestapo, to France.

Notorious during the German occupation of France as the "butcher of Lyon", Barbie was put on trial for crimes against humanity and sentenced to life imprisonment in a landmark case that saw Holocaust victims take the stand for the first time in France.

During his five years as minister, Badinter also scrapped a law discriminating against gay people on the age of sexual consent and worked to improve conditions in French prisons.

He served as president of the Constitutional Council and as a member of the French Senate from 1995 to 2011.

He worked tirelessly on trying to get a global ban on the death penalty, campaigning against executions in China and the United States.

Speaking to RFI in 2005, he expressed satisfaction that some 116 countries worldwide had abolished the death penalty.

"The trend is towards world abolition and it will come I am sure of that," he said. "I’m afraid I will not see it, but it will come."

According to Amnesty International, 144 countries are abolitionist in law or practice.

(with newswires)

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