www.ThinkCentre.org - News for a Vibrant Political Society
navigation.gif
About Us
Constitution
Contact Us
Membership
Login
Home News Features Forums Letters Editorial Links
Human Rights Watch Human Rights Education Media Watch Policy Watch Labour Watch Election Watch Asean Watch
Series Details

Death Penalty in Singapore
25 April 2005

June 2001, Think Centre begins to raise public awareness on the death penalty issue.


Sign Petition Singapore: Calls for immediate moratorium on the death penalty

April 2005, Think Centre reaffirms call for a moratorium on death penalty and to commute all death sentences to imprisonment. Think Centre calls on the government to remove the mandatory capital punishment for simple possession of drugs. The mandatory death sentence must be removed. Singapore is believe to have the world's highest per capita execution rate,relative to its population.

Series Items
Imminent Execution, 30 May 2001, Zulfikar bin Mustaffah, Aged 32, Unemployed
Zulfikar bin Mustaffah is a Drug Addict but NOT a Drug Trafficker!
Clemency Plea to the President of Singapore
Death Penalty: Information needed on Death Sentence and Execution Statistics in Singapore this year
The Death Penalty in Southeast Asia
Drug Addicts and Death Penalty in Singapore
Death Penalty Case Gets an Airing in Parliament
Zulfikar bin Mustaffah to be Hanged this Friday
Death Penalty: The Silence is Deafening and Disturbing
Was innocent man hanged due to procedure?
COURT DISMISSES DEATH-ROW APPEAL
Death penalty: The Unconstitutional Punishment
Singapore:
Indian migrant worker facing execution
Singapore Death Penalty Shrouded In Silence
Singapore: High execution rate shrouded in secrecy
SINGAPORE: Death Penalty - Julaiha Begum (f), aged 52, faces imminent execution after her appeal for presidential clemency has been denied.
Think Centre Calls for a moratorium on Death Penalty
J.B.Jeyaretnam Calls for a Criminal Cases Review Commission
S'pore: Capital punishment soars
Death Penalty
Two More to Hang in Singapore
Death Penalty: Nguyen Tuong Van appeals
Singapore: Death Penalty should be commuted to imprisonment
Singapore struggles with image as executioner
Death Penalty: NGUYEN, Vietnamese refugee-cum-scout
India: The debate on death penalty
BHUTAN: Capital punishment abolished
JAPAN: Death Penalty and the Media
Malaysia: Is Capital Punishment Justified?
Death Penalty: Latest worldwide statistics released
Govt criticized AI's report on Death Penalty: J.B.Jeyaretnam comments
A PLEA TO SAVE THE LIFE
Death Penalty: SAVE THE LIFE OF SHANMUGAM MURUGESU
Death-row detainee Shanmugam:
2 hanged and there are 8 more
Singapore: President rejects clemency for Shanmugam
Shanmugam Murugesu will be hanged: 13 May 2005
Think Centre calls for Constitutional Court decision and Moratorium on death penalty
President unable to accede for constititional court hearing
13 May 2005: Shanmugam to be hanged at 6am
Suspected Drug Trafficker Free to Do Business
The family and children of Shanmugam Murugesu
Think Centre: Reaffirms Call for Moratorium on executions
The Death Penalty – An Irrational Debate
6th May Candlelit Vigil
Hung at Dawn: Police Ban Sam's Face
Two Indonesian Domestic Workers Escape the Death Penalty
World Day Against the Death Penalty
Singapore: Government defends mandatory death penalty
SINGAPORE: Two Africans sentenced to death
Poem: Hung at Dawn
Static Art Display: Hung at Dawn Concert
HUNG AT DAWN: Concert Against Death Penalty
Singapore finally finds a voice in death row protest
Jakarta: Protest against Death Penalty in Singapore
S'pore frees German drug offender
Singapore activists vow to keep fire burning against death penalty
Think Centre calls for a moratorium on Death Penalty
The question of the death penalty
AI reports on Singapore executions, human rights
What does PERC have to do with Death Penalty!
There Is More To The Death Penalty Debate
Singapore opposed the call for a moratorium on death-penalty
 
Back

News
Imminent Execution, 30 May 2001, Zulfikar bin Mustaffah, Aged 32, Unemployed
(Amnesty International)

30 May 2001
Zulfikar Bin Mustaffah faces imminent execution following rejection of his appeal against his death sentence earlier this year. His remaining recourse is to petition the President, who has the power to grant clemency.
Zulfikar Bin Mustaffah was sentenced to death in November 2000 after being found in possession of a package containing approximately 70 grams of heroin. A drug addict since the age of 14, he dropped out of school at 15 and has spent most of his life in drug rehabilitation centres or in detention.

Zulfikar Bin Mustaffah was unemployed at the time of his arrest and had reportedly found it difficult to find work due to his criminal record for drug addiction.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases as a violation of the right to life and the right not to be subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, as proclaimed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The death penalty is an inherently unjust and arbitrary punishment, however heinous the crime for which it is provided. Studies have shown that it is more likely to be imposed on those who are poorer, less educated and more vulnerable than average. The risk of error in applying the death penalty is inescapable, yet it is irrevocable. While Amnesty International recognizes the need to combat drug trafficking, there is no convincing evidence that the death penalty deters would-be traffickers more effectively than other punishments. Furthermore, there is always a risk that drug abusers may be executed, while those who mastermind the crime of trafficking evade arrest and punishment.

The death penalty is mandatory in Singapore for drug trafficking, murder, treason and certain firearms offences. Anyone over the age of 18 found in possession of more than 15 grams of heroin, 30 grams of morphine or cocaine, or 500 grams of cannabis is presumed, unless the contrary can be proved, to be trafficking in the drug and faces a mandatory death sentence. Persistent drug addicts who have been admitted more than twice to a drugs rehabilitation centre are treated as criminals who may be imprisoned for up to 13 years and caned. Despite these draconian anti-drugs laws, drug addiction continues to be a problem.

Singapore, with a population of just over 3 million, is believed to have one of the highest rates of executions per capita in the world. Recent government figures show that out of 340 people executed between 1991 and 2000, 247 had been convicted of drug trafficking. Executions are by hanging and take place on Friday mornings at dawn. Families of convicts are normally only informed of the impending execution one week beforehand. There is no public debate about the use of the death penalty in the country.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send telegrams/telexes/faxes/express/airmail letters in English or your own language: -urging the President to commute the death sentence of Zulfikar Bin Mustaffah; - expressing sympathy for the victims of crime, but pointing out that if the execution is carried out, it will only cause more suffering for the relatives of Zulfikar Bin Mustaffah; - expressing your unconditional opposition to the death penalty as a violation of one of the most fundamental of human rights - the right to life; - recognizing the need to combat drug trafficking, but emphasizing that there is no proof that the death penalty deters would-be traffickers more effectively than other punishments and appealing to the authorities to find a more humane way to tackle this crime.

APPEALS TO:

The President His Excellency S R Nathan Office of the President Istana, Orchard Road Republic of Singapore 0922 Telegrams: President S R Nathan, Singapore Faxes: + 65 738 4673 Salutation: Your Excellency

COPIES OF YOUR APPEALS TO:

The Prime Minister The Honourable Goh Chok Tong Office of the Prime Minister Istana Annexe, Orchard Road Republic of Singapore 0923 Telegrams: Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong, Singapore Faxes: + 65 732 4627

Minister of Law Professor Shanmugham Jayakumar Ministry of Law 250 North Bridge Road 07-00 Raffles City Tower Republic of Singapore 179101 Telegrams: FOREIGN RS 21242, RS21 136, RS20358 Faxes: + 65 332 8842 e-mail: supmlaw@cs.gov.sg

Minister of Home Affairs Wong Kan Seng Ministry of Home Affairs Phoenix Park Tanglin Road Republic of Singapore 247904 Faxes: + 65 734 4420 Telegrams: Minister of Home Affairs, Singapore

and to diplomatic representatives of Singapore accredited to your country.

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY!

Back to the top...
Back

Mailing Address:- P.O.Box 640, Teban Garden Post office, Singapore 916002 Tel: (65)9479 1906 Fax: (65)6425 0709
Feedback: thinkcentre@hotmail.com
Website Matters:
thinkcentre@hotmail.com