Pierre withholds judgment on death penalty petition

Amid a surge in violent crime and public outrage over a recent high-profile killing, thousands of Saint Lucians are pushing the island nation’s government to bring back capital punishment, a penalty that has been removed from the country’s judicial framework for years.

During Monday’s regular cabinet media briefing, Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre confirmed that demands for the reinstatement of capital punishment have become a constant in his interactions with constituents. He told journalists, “Every day, someone tells me to bring back hanging, every day.”

The current wave of public pressure gained traction following the fatal murder of 24-year-old Joy St Omer. After the killing, the victim’s estranged husband surrendered to local law enforcement, and the tragedy amplified long-simmering public anxiety over a steady increase in violent crime across the country. It was this growing public conversation that prompted Choice TV reporter Krishna Smith to press the prime minister for an official response during the briefing.

To formalize their demands, advocacy launched an online public petition on May 21 titled “Petition to Reinstate and Active-enforce Capital Punishment for Capital Murder and Heinous Offences in Saint Lucia.” By the time of the prime minister’s briefing, the petition had already gathered 7,924 signatures from Saint Lucians backing the policy change.

Organizers behind the petition have announced plans to deliver a formal formal submission to all members of the national parliament. The letter will lay out the group’s concerns over persistent violent crime and urge lawmakers to open debate on reinstating the death penalty, alongside broader reforms to the national justice system that would introduce harsher penalties for serious offenders.

Despite the growing public outcry, Pierre has declined to take a definitive position on the issue, stressing that the topic requires careful deliberation given deep divides across Saint Lucian society. “I will not venture to give an opinion now, I can’t,” he said. The prime minister noted that key national institutions hold opposing views on the policy, pointing specifically to the Catholic Church, which is a major social and cultural force on the island and has long formally opposed capital punishment. “So, it’s a very complex issue and it’s not an issue that you can just proclaim on, at this point, I’m not willing to say,” Pierre added.