700px-Hrw_logo.svgSingapore’s execution of Mohammad bin Kadar on April 17, 2015, should be the last use of capital punishment in the country, Human Rights Watch said today.

Singapore has about 25 people on death row. At least two, recently sentenced, could face execution in the coming months. In place of these and other potential executions, Singapore should join the 117 United Nations member countries that in 2014 voted for a global moratorium on the death penalty and move ultimately to abolish it.

“Singapore should realize that its use of the death penalty makes it an increasing outlier among nations,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “It’s a barbaric practice that has no place in a modern state.”

Singapore authorities hanged 39-year-old Mohammad bin Kadar after he spent eight years on death row for the 2005 murder of his neighbor, a 69-year-old woman. The court determined that Mohammad bin Kadar, who had a borderline IQ of 76 and was in a drug-induced state, knew what he was doing when he stabbed the victim repeatedly, establishing he had an “intention to kill,” which under Singapore law made the death penalty mandatory.

Image from Zaobao, provided by Singapore Police Force
Mohammad bin Kadar (image – Zaobao, provided by Singapore Police Force)

Philip Alston, the UN special rapporteur on extra-judicial executions at the time said in reference to a 2005 drug case in Singapore that having a mandatory death penalty violates international legal standards. Making such a penalty mandatory, thus eliminating the discretion of the court “makes it impossible to take into account mitigating or extenuating circumstances and eliminates any individual determination of an appropriate sentence in a particular case.… The adoption of such a black-and-white approach is entirely inappropriate where the life of the accused is at stake.”

In November 2012, Singapore’s parliament revised the law to restrict the kinds of drug and murder convictions for which the death penalty is mandatory. In murder cases, death sentences are not mandatory if the convicted murderer had “no outright intention to kill.” Mohammad bin Kadar appealed his death sentence on the grounds that the law had been amended, but his appeal was rejected.

According to Amnesty International, since the laws were amended, courts have reviewed and eventually commuted death sentences to life imprisonment and caning in at least nine cases. However, the law still provides for mandatory death sentences, in contravention of international standards.

At least two of those on death row in Singapore, Kho Jabing and Michael Galing, received mandatory death sentences after being convicted in separate murder cases. Human Rights Watch opposes the death penalty in all cases because of its inherent cruelty and irreversibility and urges the government to commute the sentences of all those held on death row.

In July 2012, Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean reiterated the Singaporean government’s longstanding position on the death penalty, saying that “the death penalty has been an effective deterrent and an appropriate punishment for very serious offences, and [Singaporeans] largely support it. As part of our penal framework, it has contributed to keeping crime and the drug situation under control.”

In its December 18, 2007 resolution calling for a worldwide moratorium on the death penalty, the UN General Assembly stated that “there is no conclusive evidence of the death penalty’s deterrent value and that any miscarriage or failure of justice in the death penalty’s implementation is irreversible and irreparable.”

“How many people will Singapore execute before they understand that the death penalty is not an effective deterrent to crime?” Robertson said. “Singapore should join with the UN secretary-general in recognizing that the ‘death penalty has no place in the 21st century.’”

More from Human Rights Watch reporting on Singapore.

Subscribe
Notify of
3 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

PSP’s Brad Bowyer shares photo of him and Lee Hsien Yang, says it requires nationwide effort to “recover Singapore”

The Progress Singapore Party (PSP) on Thursday (18 June) announced six of…

活跃通勤修订案一读,禁令或延伸至所有电动个人代步工具

自去年11月禁止电动滑板车上路后,昨日国会中对活跃通勤法令修订案提出一读,可能将禁令延伸至所有电动个人代步工具,包括电动滑板和电动自行车。 活跃通勤法修订案也会纳入活跃通勤咨询小组早前提出的建议,如电动滑板车骑士最低年龄为16岁,以及骑士必须强制性接受交通理论测试等。 该建议于去年9月提出,而有关当局则在12月时宣布咨询小组建议。 此外,法案若通过后,将在今年4月起,所有电动滑板车都必须接受强制性检查,以杜绝非法改装问题。 交通部发文告说明,“为了强化陆路交通局处理非法改装为题,修正案扩大了监管制度,以涵盖所有相关设备。 一旦发现非法改装问题,将视用户以及零售商为违法者,并加大力度判处违法行为,以促进更好的公共道路安全措施。”

Is Singapore’s competition watchdog, a dog without teeth?

It has been announced that Singapore’s competition watchdog will be conducting a…

“先隔离总干事,他才从中国回来!” 世卫泰国代表搞笑狠酸谭德塞引全场哄笑

武汉冠状病毒肆虐全球,世界卫生组织(WHO)总干事谭德塞多次发表争议性言论,引发批评,而近日一段卫生组织会议上,泰国代表的发言狠酸谭德塞,调侃谭德塞与中国防疫的表现,引发现场阵阵笑声。 世卫2月6日在泰国曼谷举行第146次执行委员会会议,原本严肃会议却因泰国代表苏威发挥狠酸功力,直指目前世卫组织反对落实旅游限制的建议已被忽略,若真要落实旅游禁令,那么总干事谭德塞应该最先被隔离,因为他刚去往北京,但如今又在现场开会。 他狂酸,“主席,你最危险,因为你一直坐在总干事旁边!我个人倒是很安全,因为过去这几天总干事都不跟我握手和拥抱。” 此话一出,会场内发出阵阵笑声,而坐在前方的印度代表,更是忍不住发笑。 此外,他还讽刺表示目前全球正失去信心,要想建立人民的信心,最好是在中国开会,尤其是武汉。 “主席,我建议我们WHO应到中国开会,尤其是到武汉,现在正是造访拥有两千年历史黄鹤楼的最好时机! 或是去北京也行,现在长城、紫禁城等旅游区都没有人,而且价格也便宜! ” 最后,他也表示,“我已征得我太太的同意,愿意捐出我半年的退休金,另外自掏腰包参与这个在中国举办的WHO会议,谢谢! ” 泰国代表的酸言酸语,令会场不断发出笑声,而坐在前方的印度代表更是时不时偷笑。 网友在看到视频后,纷纷笑说,“真的是有够酸“,”印度代表要忍笑到内伤了“,”被泰式酸辣笑翻了“,”跟泰国的广告一样,幽默而充满深度!…