UN experts condemn continued use of death penalty for drug-related crimes: Singapore

OHCHR

UN experts* today strongly condemned Singapore’s execution of Tangaraju s/o Suppiah on Tuesday (26) and called on the Government to impose an immediate moratorium on capital punishment in the country.

Tangaraju, a 46-year-old Tamil national from Singapore, was executed despite claims that he had not been provided with adequate interpretation during police interrogations. He was subsequently convicted of drug trafficking.

“The death penalty can only be carried out after a legal process with every possible safeguard that ensures a fair trial, including legal representation at every stage of proceedings and necessaryinterpretation in all oral proceedings,” the UN experts said.

The rate of execution notices for drug-related offences in Singapore was “highly alarming”, they said.

“States that have not yet abolished the death penalty may only impose capital punishment for the ‘most serious crimes’,” the experts said. “Under international law, only crimes of extreme gravity involvingintentional killing can be considered as ‘most serious’. Drug offences clearly do not meet this threshold.”

They also raised concerns about discriminatory treatment of individuals belonging to minorities, such as Tangaraju, and reports of reprisals against their legal counsel.

Tangaraju was sentenced to the death penalty under Singaporean law, which makes capital punishmentmandatory for certain offences, including drug-related convictions. The mandatory sentencing law stripsjudges of discretion to consider individual cases, context and circumstances, the experts said.

“We reiterate that the mandatory use of the death penalty constitutes an arbitrary deprivation of life, since it is imposed without taking into account the defendant’s personal circumstances or circumstances of the particular offence,” they said.

The UN experts expressed alarm by the de facto suspension of the moratorium on the death penalty by the Government in 2019. They urged the Government of Singapore to review, without delay, the scope of the death penalty, particularly with regard to drug-related offences. “Singapore must ensure that theimposition of the death penalty and its implementation is strictly limited to cases involving intentional killing,” the experts said.

“Any measures to abolish the death penalty should be seen as progress towards the realisation of theright to life. By extension, the resumption of executions results in less protection of the right to life,” they said.

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