By Eileen Ng, KUALA
LUMPUR, Malaysia
Singapore hanged a third prisoner in two weeks on Thursday for drug trafficking despite calls for the city-state to halt capital punishment for drug-related crimes.
The Central Narcotics Bureau
said Mohamed Shalleh Abdul Latiff, a 39-year-old Singaporean, was executed at
Singapore’s Changi Prison after being accorded due process under the law.
He was sentenced to death for
trafficking 54 grams (1.9 ounces) of heroin, an amount “sufficient to feed the
addiction of about 640 abusers for a week,” it said in a statement.
Transformative Justice
Collective, an anti-death penalty advocate in Singapore, said Shalleh, an
ethnic Malay, worked as a delivery driver before his arrest in 2016. He was
sentenced in 2019 but his appeal was dismissed last year.
The group said Shalleh had
maintained in his trial that he believed he was delivering contraband
cigarettes for a friend to whom he owed money, and he didn’t verify the
contents of the bag as he trusted his friend.
The High Court judge ruled
that their ties weren’t close enough to warrant the kind of trust he claimed to
have had for his friend. Although the court found he was merely a courier,
Shalleh was given the mandatory death penalty because prosecutors didn’t issue
him a certificate of having cooperated with them, it said.
Singapore’s laws mandate the death penalty
for anyone convicted of trafficking more than 500 grams (17.6 ounces) of
cannabis and 15 grams (0.5 ounces) of heroin.
Shalleh
was the fifth person to be executed this year, and the 16th executed for drug
offences since the city-state resumed hangings in March 2022, after a two-year
hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Two other citizens were executed last week: Saridewi Djamani,
45, who was the first woman to be hanged in 19 years on Friday, for
trafficking about 31 grams (1 ounce) of heroin; and Mohammed Aziz Hussain, 56,
hanged two days prior for trafficking around 50 grams (1.75 ounces) of heroin.
Human rights groups,
international activists and the United Nations have urged Singapore to halt
executions for drug offenses and say there is increasing evidence it is
ineffective as a deterrent. Singapore authorities insist capital punishment is
important to halting drug demand and supply.
Critics say Singapore’s harsh
policy punishes low-level traffickers and couriers, who are typically recruited
from marginalized groups with vulnerabilities.
They say Singapore is also out
of step with the trend of more countries moving away from capital punishment.
Neighboring Thailand has legalized cannabis, while Malaysia ended the mandatory death penalty for serious
crimes this year.
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