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Protocol No. 6 to the European Convention on Human Rights
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Protocol No. 6 to the European Convention on Human Rights is a text drawn up by the Council of Europe. It aims to restrict the application of the death penalty by abolishing it in peacetime. It is the only optional protocol to the Convention that is signed and ratified by all members of the Council of Europe.[1]
It was subsequently supplemented by Protocol No. 13, which abolishes the death penalty in all circumstances, including in times of war or threat of war.
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Case of Al-Saadoon and Mufdhi
In its 2010 judgment in the case of Al-Saadoon and Mufdhi v. United Kingdom, the Court concluded that Article 2 of the Convention prohibits the death penalty, due to the general trend towards its abolition among the States Parties to the Convention[2]. Thus, the ratification of these two protocols is now essentially symbolic: it reflects the voluntary commitment of the State Party to the abolitionist trend in Europe, without it being a requirement to which it is compelled to conform.
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Purpose

Protocol No. 6 is one of the so-called additional protocols, the purpose of which is to add more rights to the list of those initially proclaimed by the Convention. For this reason, States that have ratified the Convention are free to sign it or not. For the same reason, it is not necessary for all States parties to the Convention to ratify the protocol for it to enter into force. This provides flexibility to States, although at the cost of generating differences between them.[3]
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See also
Summary of ratifications of the substantive additional protocols
References
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