October 12




ANTIGUA:

Top Cop says Death Penalty Can Be a Deterrent



Acting Commissioner of Police, Atlee Rodney, believes there is still a place for the death penalty in today's society.

"Over the years we keep hearing all the debate about it, but I think it still has its place. I think it can serve as a deterrent to some of the heinous crimes we are having. Some persons think it is inhumane but you need to have certain things to serve as a deterrent to crime. I am one of the people who think it still has its place," the acting commissioner said.

He was speaking with OBSERVER media on the occasion of World Day Against the Death Penalty.

Rodney acknowledged that there are those who would argue that there are countries which continue to practice the death penalty which would suggest that it has not acted as a deterrent.

"But, I think that we need to have some sort of strong punishment to send a serious message in those cases," Rodney said. "It is still on the books but there has been a lot of procedures and rulings from higher courts that give certain instructions."

The World Day Against the Death Penalty is observed annually on October 10 since 2003.

It has been spearheaded by the World Coalition against the Death Penalty (WCADP).

Many renowned institutions that support the anti-death penalty thrust, including Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch, are members of WCADP.

The annual commemoration highlights the plight of those who have been denied the most essential human right of all, the right to life, by the justice system.

This year, the aim is to raise awareness of the inhumane living conditions of people sentenced to death.

The Greater Caribbean For Life has highlighted that too often, the UN Standard Minimum Rules for the treatment of prisoners are ignored, with many death row inmates confined to harsh and inhumane conditions.

The rules set out the minimum standards for good prison management, to include ensuring the rights of prisoners are respected.

In a release, the activist group listed overcrowding, solitary confinement, substandard physical and psychological health care, as well as insufficient access to natural light as some of the problems plaguing those condemned to death.

(source: stluciatimes.com)








UGANDA:

Journey of Hope Organisation visits the Commission



Staff from Journey of Hope Uganda chapter together with US based chapter paid a courtesy visit to Uganda Law Reform Commission. The purpose of this visit was to advocate for the abolition of the death penalty and replace it with alternative forms of punishment. This will end the cycle of violence that capital punishment perpetuates in society. The speakers shared their stories about the process of healing through reconciliation. Among these included family members of those executed by death row and those exonerated from death row.

(source: ulrc.go.ug)








IRAN:

Iranian Yarsani Man; Killed by Security Forces or Executed in Prison?



Iranian state-run media say Ramin Majidifar has been executed on rape charges while some human rights activists say he was initially arrested by security forces for propagating his religious beliefs.

On October 9, 2018, Iranian Semi-official Fars News Agency reported that Ramin Majidifar was executed in the Iranian city of Hamedan on rape charges. According to the report, he was arrested on August 16, 2018, in Hamedan and was convicted to death for raping 10 people, kidnapping, recording video of his sexual relationship with women and blackmailing them.

However, some human rights activists, including Iran HRM website, report that he was arrested in the Iranian city of Tuyserkan -not Hamedan- and for charges like spreading propaganda for Yarsan faith. Ramin Majidifar was a Yarsani, belong to Yarsan faith which has hundreds of thousands of followers, mostly in western Iran and among Kurds.

Some human rights activists claim that he was killed while was under arrest by security forces, and his execution was announced to cover the murder.

Lack of transparency in Iranian Judiciary and suppressing freedom of the press makes it difficult for the media and human rights activist to obtain credible information in such cases. In this regard, Iran Human Rights (IHR) Persian website has invited those who know about Ramin’s case or have pieces of related evidence, to contact the organization.

(source: Iran Human Rights)








PAKISTAN:

LHC sets aside death sentence handed to PML-N MNA Abid Raza, 3 others in murder case



The Lahore High Court (LHC) on Thursday acquitted PML-N MNA Chaudhry Abid Raza and 3 others in a murder case, DawnNewsTV reported.

A 2-member LHC division bench comprising Justice Sardar Shamim Ahmad and Justice Shehbaz Rizvi was hearing the case.

A trial court had sentenced Raza in 1999 under Section 302 of the Pakistan Penal Code and Section 7 of the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA) for murdering 6 people. The conviction was challenged before the LHC but was dismissed when both parties reached a compromise. The death sentence was revoked in 2003 by a division bench.

In 2016, the Supreme Court suspended the 2003 judgement and remanded the case to the LHC.

Last month, the LHC bench that was hearing the case, had appointed a criminal law expert as amicus curiae (friend of court) to decide whether an offence under Section 7 of the ATA was compoundable (reconcilable).

During today's hearing, the MNA's lawyer had argued that Raza was acquitted after an agreement with the complainant. The state lawyer, however, said that a compromise deed did not hold in a terrorism case and urged the court to reinstate the trial court's verdict that was issued in 1999.

Previously, the counsel for MNA and other convicts had claimed that Section 7 of the ATA was not added in the case. They argued that the high court would have to hear the appeal against the conviction on merits if it maintained death penalty under the special law.

The counsel had further said that the omission from conviction under section 7 of ATA in the 2003 decision was on part of the court and the acquitted convicts could not be punished for that error.

The bench, in its ruling today, suspended the trial court's decision and acquitted four people, including Raza, MNA from NA-71 (Gujrat).

(source: dawn.com)








PAPUA NEW GUINEA:

UN pushes for PNG to abolish death penalty



As the world mark the 16th World Day against Death Penalty, the UN Resident Coordinator in PNG reaffirms the UN’s commitment towards the abolition of death penalty in PNG.

As the world mark the 16th World Day against Death Penalty, the UN Resident Coordinator in PNG reaffirms the UN’s commitment towards the abolition of death penalty in PNG.

Even though, the Papua New Guinean courts still hand down death sentences, none have been carried out since 1954, amounting to a de facto moratorium on the punishment.

UN resident coordinator Gianluca Rampolla said that the last execution occurred over half a century ago making it de facto.

"The last execution in Papua New Guinea occurred in 1954, over half a century ago, putting Papua New Guinea in line with 140 out of 153 UN member states, which have abolished the death penalty in law or in practice," Mr Rampolla said.

He urged the government to formalise the de facto moratorium.

"On behalf of the UN, I urge that the de facto moratorium on the death penalty, in line with the global trend towards abolition, must be maintained and formalised."

He said that the right to life is the most fundamental of all rights.

It lies at the very heart of international human rights law."

He said that there was no evidence that the death penalty deterred crime while there was ample evidence that it resulted all-too-frequently in miscarriage of justice.

"It is the certainty of punishment, not the severity that has proven to be an effective deterrent to crime."

He echoed the remarks of United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein concluding his country visit to PNGin February 2018 that "transparent societies with a strong emphasis on the rule of law, accountability and human rights attract opportunities for growth, and make for more stable societies".

Mr Rampolla said that the UN works with the PNG government, civil society and other development partners.

This is to strengthen rule of law and to uphold respect for human rights.

"We also work with the law enforcement agencies and justice system to put in place mechanisms to deal with serious issues such as human trafficking and people smuggling, juvenile justice, domestic violence, and sorcery accusation related violence."

(source: postcourier.com.pg)








INDONESIA:

Busting the myths of the death penalty



October 10 is World Day against Death Penalty. Indonesia is one of the few remaining countries that still implements capital punishment. Despite many rejections from various circles, the Indonesian government still believes the death penalty serves as an effective deterrent against crime.

In a book, Politik Hukuman Mati di Indonesia (The Politics of Capital Punishment in Indonesia), I wrote that research on the deterrent effect of the death penalty has yet to be conducted in Indonesia. Apart from the lack of empirical data, other arguments and studies around the world have shown the deterrent effect of capital punishment is a myth.

The rationale of capital punishment

Within penology, a branch of criminology that studies criminal sanctions, the idea that the death penalty has a deterrent effect rose with the influence of classic utilitarianism in the 18th century within the Western legal system.

Classic utilitarianism is a theoretical approach to ethics that was introduced by the philosophers Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill. Scholars before them, such as Immanuel Kant in The Philosophy of Law, regarded punishment as a moral obligation. Kant saw sanctions not as an attempt to promote goodness but as a direct punishment against the perpetrator of a crime.

Classic utilitarianism also shifted the perspective of penalties towards its purpose or consequences. Based on the utilitarian approach, a sanction is justified if it can bring the most benefit to the most number of people. If crime can be prevented to create public safety, then a punishment is justified.

Capital punishment is then seen as a type of sanction that can effectively scare people from committing crime. The death penalty is not valuable because it's a legal court "sanctioned act to kill". It's valuable because it creates a particular benefit, the prevention of crime as it deters people from transgressing in the first place.

The death penalty in Indonesia

Capital punishment in Indonesia has been in effect since the colonial era. The Governor General of the Dutch East Indies Herman Daendels utilised capital punishment as a method to silence rebellion within the colonies. The legal basis of the death penalty was formalised in Dutch colonial penal code (Wetboek van Strafrecht voor Indonesia (WvSI)) on January 1, 1918. Provisions within the WvSI were maintained as Indonesia's penal code even after the country's independence.

From the colonial era until today, the death penalty is still being carried out in Indonesia despite numerous renunciations. Rejection mostly comes from civil organisations such as Amnesty International, The Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence (KontraS), and the Institute for Policy Research and Advocacy (Elsam).

Their reason to refuse the death penalty relates to the concept that capital punishment as a penalty violates human rights and, at the same time, does not guarantee fair trial. The National Commission for the Protection of Human Rights (Komnas HAM) also recommends its practice in Indonesia be reviewed.

However, it seems the government has turned a blind eye and still goes forward with the death penalty in Indonesia.

The most high profile case of capital punishment that received global attention happened in 2015.

On January 18 and April 29, 2015, the government executed 14 death row inmates who were convicted for drug-related crimes.

President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo has proclaimed he will enforce the law and eradicate drug abuses as they have torn the nation apart. Jokowi's stance on capital punishment is seen as a decisive act and a call to war against narcotics. Jokowi believes the death penalty is a manifestation of the government's responsibility to protect future generations.

The myth of deterrence

K.G. Armstrong, a penologist, sees punishment as a way to inflict suffering against a criminal perpetrator so they won't repeat the same violation, and to deter others from the same crime.

However, the claim capital punishment can have a deterrent effect against future crime has been refuted many times. Numerous studies, especially within the US, have cast doubt on the deterrent effect.

The main reason for doubt relates to the difficulty of obtaining empirical evidence for the effect of capital punishment. Sociologist Michael L. Radelet and criminologist Ronald L. Akers stated in 1996 that to prove the death penalty's deterrent effect we would need a method that may be constrained by the ethics of research. Ultimately, it's not ethical to measure the deterrent effect of capital punishment before and after an execution.

A method that can then be used is to measure the statistics of crime that are subject to the death penalty, and compare data before and after an execution.

However, research conducted by sociologist David Johnson in Japan and South Korea shows how the decline in the executions in Japan is followed by a decline in murder cases. In the 1950s, the average number of executions in Japan was 25 per year while in the 1980s that average dropped to only 1.5 per year. During that period, the murder cases dropped by 80%.

On the other hand, in South Korea, there was not a significant difference in the number of murder cases between the years before and after 23 people were executed in 1997. This data questions the ability of the death penalty to control crime.

Another problem related to measuring the deterrent effect is that even if there was a decline, is it not possible it was influenced by other factors?

Law professor Stuart Banner found the deterrent effect for murders in the US cannot be isolated from the influences of other factors such as population density, welfare equality, level of education and religion.

The factors mentioned above affect the number of crimes. While other studies that have sought to prove the deterrent effect of capital punishment, tend to see those extraneous factors as constant.

Minimal support from criminologists

Radelet and Akers's research presented noteworthy data showing there is minimal support from criminologists of the death penalty.

They concluded capital punishment does and will not have higher deterrent effect than lifelong imprisonment. They also found the death penalty is nothing more than a political commodity in relation the electability of politicians during election season.

In 2009, Radelet conducted another study with a similar method along with legal expert Traci L. Lacock.

Involving 94 respondents, the research has shown only 2.6% agreed with the statement that the death penalty can deter people from committing murder. The remaining 86.9% disagreed. This means only a small number of acclaimed criminologists in the US actually believes the threat of the death penalty can curtail murder. Most of them believe life imprisonment is a stronger deterrent.

In other words, criminologists agree capital punishment is not supported with strong empirical data that it can decrease crime.

Although classic utilitarianism is seen as the foundation of penal theory, in An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, Jeremy Bentham explained there were certain conditions where the implementation of certain sanctions can no longer be condoned. Those conditions include circumstances when punishments can no longer prevent crime or if there are alternative types of sanctions that can do a better job.

Due to minimal evidence and support from empirical data, the Indonesian government should reevaluate the practice of capital punishment.

(source: phys.org)








MALAYSIA:

Malaysia to Repeal Death Penalty and Sedition Law



The case of Muhammad Lukman Mohamad ignited outrage in August, when he received a death sentence in Malaysia for selling medicinal cannabis oil to cancer patients.

Even the country's new prime minister, Mahathir Mohamad, called for a review of the sentence the 29-year-old father received.

Now, Mr. Mahathir's government is going 1 step further, eliminating the death penalty entirely.

"All death penalty will be abolished. Full stop," the country's minister of law, Liew Vui Keong, told reporters this week.

The government is also preparing to rescind the colonial-era Sedition Act, which was used by previous governments to silence critics and opposition politicians. Gobind Singh, the communications and multimedia minister, said on Thursday that use of the law should be suspended immediately, pending its repeal.

"The decision was made by the cabinet yesterday that since we are going to abolish the Sedition Act, action under that act should be suspended temporarily," he told reporters.

Parliament is expected to consider measures rescinding both laws in the coming weeks.

About 1,200 people, many of them sentenced for drug offenses, are on death row in Malaysia. The government imposed a moratorium on executions in July.

Amnesty International called the decision to end capital punishment "a major step forward for all those who have campaigned for an end to the death penalty in Malaysia."

Abolishing capital punishment and repealing the Sedition Act were in the campaign platform of Mr. Mahathir's coalition, Pakatan Harapan, but the measures received little attention during the recent election campaign.

The coalition won a surprising victory in May over the political machine of the prime minister at the time, Najib Razak, who now faces dozens of charges of corruption. Mr. Mahathir, 92, previously served as prime minister from 1981 to 2003.

Ending the death penalty could aid in the investigation of Mr. Najib's possible role in the 2006 murder of a Mongolian woman, Altantuya Shaariibuu, by his bodyguards. While the bodyguards were convicted, the authorities hope to discover who gave the orders.

Ms. Altantuya helped negotiate Malaysia's purchase of French submarines, a transaction that remains under investigation for possible kickbacks. She claimed that she was owed $500,000 for helping to broker the deal.

One person convicted of her murder, Sirul Azhar Umar, fled to Australia, where he is now in immigration detention. He has offered to help Malaysia's new government in its investigation, but Australia had been unwilling to return him because he could have faced the death penalty in Malaysia.

Securing Mr. Sirul's return was not the purpose of abolishing the death penalty but is “a good side benefit,” said Ramkarpal Singh, a member of Parliament and the brother of Mr. Gobind.

"Now the Australian government must send him back," he said. "They have no reason to keep him once it is abolished."

Malaysia's move to end capital punishment goes against the grain in Southeast Asia, where some countries execute people convicted of trafficking even relatively small amounts of narcotics.

Only 2 countries in the region, Cambodia and the Philippines, have banned the death penalty. And President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines, who has encouraged extrajudicial killings of thousands of drug users and sellers, is leading an effort to reinstate legal executions.

In Malaysia, the death penalty is mandatory for murder, drug trafficking, treason and waging war against the king.

The case of Mr. Mohamad, the cannabis oil seller, helped focus attention on the unfairness of imposing a mandatory death sentence in drug trafficking cases even when they involved the sale of relatively small amounts, said Mr. Ramkarpal, who has long opposed the death penalty.

During his trial, Mr. Mohamad testified that he had sold cannabis oil to patients suffering from life-threatening illnesses.

"Cases like that made the point very clearly that the mandatory death penalty ought to go," Mr. Ramkarpal said.

(source: New York Times)

**********************

Malaysia decision raises hopes for Exposto



A convicted Australian drug trafficker on death row in Malaysia could escape the hangman's noose after the government of Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad announced plans to abolish the death penalty.

An appeal court in Malaysia sentenced Sydney grandmother Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto to death by hanging earlier this year after overturning her earlier acquittal on charges of trafficking 1.5kg of crystal methamphetamine into Malaysia.

"That will have a very very positive effect on Maria's case, it means she won't face the death penalty," Exposto's lawyer, Farhan Shafee, told AAP.

Abolition of the death penalty was announced on Wednesday - World Day Against the Death Penalty - and Shafee said legislation was expected to be tabled in parliament next week.

"We are still waiting for it to be tabled," he said. "Of course we are very, very happy to read the news and we welcome this decision by the cabinet. This means Malaysia will conform with international standards, which we have always been advocating."

Exposto, 54, claimed she was the victim of a set-up after she was found with the drugs stitched into the lining of her bag when arriving in Kuala Lumpur on a flight from China en-route to Melbourne in 2014.

She was acquitted after the judge found she was scammed by her online boyfriend and was unaware she was carrying the drugs. But the prosecution in the appeal argued Exposto had been wilfully blind, that her defence was made up and she had engaged in a "sly game".

Shafee said a date had not yet been set for Expostos's final appeal to be heard in the Federal Court, although he expected this to be made known shortly.

Australia's relationship with Malaysia has been strained in the past over the use of the death penalty and soured in 1986 amid the hanging of Australian drug runners Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers.

The decision to abandon the death penalty was also welcomed by Amnesty International.

"Today's announcement is a major step forward for all those who have campaigned for an end to the death penalty in Malaysia," Kumi Naidoo, Amnesty International's Secretary General, said.

"Malaysia must now join the 106 countries who have turned their backs for good on the ultimate cruel, inhumane, degrading punishment - the world is watching."

(source: Australian Associated Press)

******************

Aussie on death row wins reprieve as Malaysia abolishes the death penalty



Malaysia has decided to abolish the death penalty, a senior minister said Thursday, with more than 1200 people on death row, including Australian Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto, set to win a reprieve following a groundswell of opposition to capital punishment.

Executions are currently mandatory for murder, kidnapping, possession of firearms and drug trafficking, among other crimes, and is carried out by hanging - a legacy of British colonial rule.

Human Rights Watch hailed the "fabulous news", with its deputy director for Asia Phil Robertson saying the move would increase pressure on other countries in the region to follow suit.

The government decided to scrap capital punishment because the Malaysian public had shown they were against the death penalty, communications and multimedia minister Gobind Singh Deo Gobind said.

"I hope the law will be amended soon," he told AFP.

Government minister Liew Vui Keong reportedly said earlier Thursday there would be a moratorium on executions for inmates currently on death row.

"Since we are abolishing the sentence, all executions should not be carried out," the Star newspaper quoted him as saying.

Liew said the amended law would be put before parliament next Monday.

The government's announcement was "an encouraging sign", Amnesty International's Kumi Naidoo said in a statement.

"There is no time to waste - the death penalty should have been consigned to the history books long ago."

The moratorium on the death penalty affects, among others, two women accused of assassinating the estranged half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il last year.

A Malaysian court last year ruled the case could proceed against Indonesian national Siti Aisyah and Doan Thi Huong of Vietnam after Kim Jong Nam's murder at Kuala Lumpur Airport.

Australian citizen Exposto, 54, who was found guilty of drug smuggling by an appeals court in May, will win a reprieve.

"The reprieve can be in the form of a life sentence," Gurdial Singh, president of the National Human Rights Society, told AFP.

2 Chilean tourists, currently on trial for the murder of a Malaysian man, would also have faced the death penalty if found guilty of murder.

The abolition could also pave the way for the extradition to Malaysia of a convicted hitman in the high-profile murder of a Mongolian model who was the lover of one of ex-prime minister Najib Razak's close associates.

Supplied

Former Malaysian police officer Sirul Azhar Umar was convicted in Malaysia for the murder of Altantuya Shaariibuu in 2006, but fled to Australia.

Australia has said it can only extradite him if Malaysia abolished the death penalty.

'Barbarous, cruel'

In April last year, Amnesty International ranked Malaysia 10th in the use of death penalty among the 23 countries that carried out capital punishment in 2016.

Between 2007 and 2017, 35 individuals were hanged, the New Straits Times newspaper said.

A total of 1,267 prisoners are on death row, making up 2.7 % of the 60,000-strong prison population.

Malaysian rights advocates welcomed the decision, saying there was never any proof that mandatory death sentences deterred offenders from violent or drug-related crimes.

"The death penalty is barbarous, and unimaginably cruel," N. Surendran, an advisor with the Lawyers for Liberty rights group, said in a statement.

Once capital punishment is scrapped, Malaysia will have the moral authority to fight for the lives of Malaysians facing death sentences abroad, he added.

Only 23 countries retain the death penalty, with China believed to be the "world's top executioner", according to Amnesty International in its report last month on capital punishment in 2017.

There were 993 executions recorded in 2017 in 23 countries, but Amnesty's numbers do not include the "thousands" it says are believed to have been executed in China, which classifies this information as a state secret.

Excluding China, Amnesty says Iran, Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Pakistan - in that order - carried out 84 % of all executions in 2017.

In Southeast Asia, Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand have death penalty laws.

(source: sbs.com.au)

*********************

Filipina to raise constitutional issues in death penalty appeal



A 9-member Federal Court bench will be assembled early next year to hear an appeal by a Filipina who is facing the death sentence for drug trafficking.

Justice David Wong Dak Wah, who chaired a 5-member bench today, allowed the application by lawyer Gopal Sri Ram, who is appearing for Alma Nudo Atenza, on grounds that constitutional issues would be raised.

Wong then adjourned the case to Jan 9 to have the case heard before an enlarged panel.

Sri Ram, who was assisted by A Srimurugan, said there would be a challenge to the constitutionality of section 37A of the Dangerous Drugs Act (DDA) 1952 which allows the court to invoke double presumptions to convict an accused.

Written submissions made available to FMT said the Federal Court in the 1998 case of Muhammed Hassan v Public Prosecutor had held that presumptions could not be used as that would be oppressive.

However, as a result, the government introduced section 37A to allow the prosecution to rely on presumptions under section 37 (d) and 37 (da) of the DDA, thereby overuling the Federal Court judgment.

Alma, in her written submission, said Article 74 (1) of the Federal Constitution only allowed Parliament to make laws but the power to declare law was in the hands of the judiciary.

What Parliament did by introducing section 37A amounted to reversing the Federal Court judgement in Muhammed's case, she added.

She argued that section 37A also violated her constitutional right to life under Article 5.

The Court of Appeal last year affirmed the 2016 findings of the High Court, which sentenced her to death for trafficking 2.5kg of methamphetamine at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang on Aug 19, 2014.

The drugs in 36 packages were found in a hand luggage.

The High Court said Alma, a mother of three, had failed to raise a reasonable doubt on the prosecution's case.

The court further held that she had failed to rebut the presumption of possession and knowledge under section 37(d) and had failed to rebut the presumption of trafficking under section 37 (da).

However, the defence took the position she was an innocent carrier of the luggage from Hong Kong which was given by an African friend.

(source: freemalaysiatoday.com)

********************

Cabinet places moratorium on medical marijuana case, Lukman escapes the gallows



The Cabinet has agreed to place a moratorium on Muhammad Lukman's death sentence, who was recently sentenced for possessing, processing and distributing medical marijuana (cannabis oil).

Youth and Sports Minister Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman (pic) said this to reporters, when met during his visit to Pakatan Harapan's youth machinery for the Oct 13 polls in Port Dickson.

"I brought this issue up in the Cabinet as well and had discussions with (Prime Minister) Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad. As a consensus, we agree that it (death penalty) should not have happened.

"At the same time, we have also agreed to put a moratorium on his death penalty," he said.

Syed Saddiq also said the Cabinet has agreed that patients who used medical marijuana should never be punished by the law.

"So, it's 2 accounts. One is death penalty as a whole, which will be taken down. And 2nd, at the same time, the usage of medical marijuana should never be punished by death penalty."

Pressed further on whether medical marijuana should be legalised, Syed Saddiq replied "one by one."

Lukman, a 29-year-old father of 1, was arrested in Dec 2015 for the possession of 3.1 litres of cannabis oil, 279 grams of compressed cannabis, 1.4kg of substance containing tetrahydrocannabinol (THC).

He was nabbed by the police along with his 5-month pregnant wife, who was freed later, during a raid at his home. He was handed a death sentence by the Shah Alam High Court on Aug 30.

The death sentence meted down to him had triggered a public outcry from various quarters, including Permatang Pauh MP Nurul Izzah Anwar, who said she will be writing an appeal to the Attorney General to seek a pardon for Lukman.

Dr Mahathir, had on Sept 19, said that Lukman's death sentence should be reviewed, while an online petition calling for his release, had garnered almost 70,000 signatures so far.

(source: thestar.com.my)

***********************

Online poll reveals majority of netizens opposed to death penalty abolition



An overwhelming 82 % of netizens opposed the government's move to axe the death penalty, as polled by Berita Harian Online, Harian Metro and the New Straits Times Online.

The stance of 22,000 Facebook and Twitter users was made clear in the online poll which opened yesterday.

Only 18 per cent of respondents backed the Cabinet’s bid to do away with mandatory death penalty in cases like murder and drug-trafficking.

Student Nur Disyah Aminuddin disagreed with the bid to abolish the death sentence as it could lead to more crimes.

"Why must we keep criminals in jail? Their upkeep is borne by the people. If there is no death sentence, then criminals would no longer be afraid and this would lead to a crime wave," she said.

Sharing the same sentiment, respondent Mohd Adam cautioned that such abolition would be a greenlight for criminals to cast aside fear of the law.

"If the death penalty is abolished, it will be a signal for criminals not to be afraid of the law.

"All (convicted criminals) will escape (the death sentence) for serious offences like vicious murders, robberies that end up in murders, and drug-trafficking," he said.

For David Lee, he opined that the government should instead allow the imposition of the death penalty on a case-to-case basis.

"There are many cases of murderers and rapists lacking in humanity who deserve deterrent punishment.

"The death penalty will also be justice for the victims' families," he said.

Respondent Nik Azman said that instead of doing away with the death sentence, the government should instead show its seriousness in combating corruption by increasing penalties for graft cases.

Respondents Sulaiman Jamin, Ron Guiza and Gnera Nineleven even suggested that Islamic Hudud-style punishments be implemented in Malaysia.

However, respondent and student Joon Hoe Tan threw his support behind the Cabinet's move as many countries no longer imposed the death penalty.

"The death sentence does not cut down crime. Life imprisonment is an opportunity for offenders to repent," he said.

Respondents Anne Axry and Faizatul Hanim Afandi said there were many alternative ways to penalise criminals and imposing the death penalty was akin to infringing on the domain of God.

(source: nst.com.my)

*******************

Death penalty or no, police to push for maximum punishment for drug offences



Maximum punishment will still be pushed by the Bukit Aman Narcotics Crime Investigations Department (NCID) when dealing with drug traffickers, even if the death penalty is abolished.

"If we look under the Dangerous Drug Act, there is a provision there that states that the court can punish the trafficker with life imprisonment with whipping of no less than 15 strokes," said Comm Datuk

Seri Mohmad Salleh during a press conference at the district police headquarters here today (Oct 12).

He was responding to questions regarding the planned abolishment of the death penalty.

Comm Mohmad Salleh reiterated that the police would always go for the maximum punishment when it came to drug trafficking.

He said, personally, he thought the death penalty was a more suitable punishment.

"If you ask me, I would still prefer the death penalty.

"You must remember that the trafficker also kill (with drugs). Slowy. But surely.

"So, my personal opinion is that the best punishment is capital punishment. But as an enforcement officer, we will follow whatever law that has been passed by Parliament."

(source: thestar.com.my)








SRI LANKA:

Appeal filed against Duminda Silva's death penalty dismissed



An appeal filed against the death penalty imposed on former Parliamentarian Duminda Silva was dismissed by the Supreme Court today.

Duminda Silva and 2 others, who were sentenced to death, had appealed against the sentence.

The Supreme Court however dismissed the appeal today.

Duminda Silva was found guilty in the Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra murder case and was sentenced to death.

Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra, a former Presidential advisor, and his bodyguards were murdered in October 2011 ahead of elections held at the time.

Duminda Silva was also injured in the incident and he sought treatment overseas but he was accused of being involved in the killing.

The convicts in the case will serve life in prison as the death sentence is not implemented in Sri Lanka.

(source: Colombo Gazette)
_______________________________________________
A service courtesy of Washburn University School of Law www.washburnlaw.edu

DeathPenalty mailing list
DeathPenalty@lists.washlaw.edu
http://lists.washlaw.edu/mailman/listinfo/deathpenalty
Unsubscribe: http://lists.washlaw.edu/mailman/options/deathpenalty

Reply via email to