Halt imminent drug executions, UN tells Singapore

Halt imminent drug executions, UN tells Singapore

The use of the death penalty for drug-related offences is incompatible with human rights law, says United Nations' human rights office.

The United Nations has called for Singapore to end capital punishment altogether. (AFP pic)
GENEVA:
The United Nations (UN) on Tuesday urged Singapore to halt the imminent executions of two men held for drug offences — and furthermore end its use of the death penalty altogether.

The UN’s office of the high commissioner for human rights (OHCHR) voiced alarm at the case of Pausi Jefridin and Roslan Bakar, who were both arrested in 2008 and convicted two years later on drug trafficking charges.

The men have been on death row for the past 12 years and were reportedly informed only last Wednesday that they would be executed one week later, on Feb 16.

“The use of the death penalty for drug-related offences is incompatible with international human rights law,” OHCHR spokesman Ravina Shamdasani told reporters in Geneva.

She stressed that capital punishment was only permitted under international law for the “most serious crimes, which is interpreted as crimes of extreme gravity involving intentional killing”.

Making matters worse in this case, Shamdasani said, were concerns that one or both men have intellectual disabilities.

She said Pausi, a Malaysian national, had been shown to have an IQ score of just 67.

She also lamented that Pausi’s family, based in Malaysia, had struggled to visit him due to Covid-19 restrictions.

A last-minute appeal on Tuesday was rejected, she said, adding that if the executions go ahead as planned on Wednesday, they will be the first in the city-state since November 2019.

Singapore, which has some of the world’s toughest drug laws, insists the death penalty is an effective deterrent against crime.

Shamdasani, however, stressed that “globally, the death penalty has not been proven to be an effective deterrent”.

At the same time, she warned, individuals on death row, as well as their families, have suffered a range of human rights violations.

“We call on the government to commute their sentences, and to reform Singapore’s legislation to bring an end to the imposition of the death penalty.”

Amnesty International’s Singapore researcher Rachel Chhoa-Howard agreed, saying the planned executions this week were “appalling”.

“It is high time for Singapore to re-establish a moratorium on the death penalty as a first step towards full abolition,” she said in a statement.

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