Eksekusi Laut Sebagai Alternatif Solutif Penghapusan Hukuman Mati dan Minimalisasi Kejahatan
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to find, describe, and conduct a critical analysis of the Sea
Execution and the Death Penalty. The research method used is philosophical hermeneutics.
Data collected through observation, documentation, and interviews were described,
interpreted, reflected, compared, and analyzed critically. The results of this study informed
the perception that the death penalty was not effective in dealing with crime. The death
penalty was a moral crime because it was against human rights. Life was a right. There
was no right to die. Death was associated with the Creator or Ruler taking back what had
been given to man. Whoever gave, he was the one who had the authority to take it. If God
Almighty was believed to be the giver of life, then God was the one who had the right to
take back that life. A natural death, without the intervention of other parties, was evidence
of taking rights which was the authority of God. God had never delegated this authority to
anyone, including the State. Therefore, the death penalty contradicted the ideology of the
State and the 1945 Constitution, so could not be used as a legal tool in eradicating crime.
The execution of the sea was a solution to abolish the death penalty, because God used the
execution of the sea in saving and converting humans, even though it was seen from a
certain perspective as God's way of eradicating evil. Execution of the sea respected the
authority of God and had freed State from mral evil.
Collections
- LSP-Jurnal Ilmiah Dosen [7302]