[{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"NewsArticle","@id":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/destinations\/singapore\/majority-still-believes-death-penalty-deters-the-more-serious-crimes\/#NewsArticle","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/destinations\/singapore\/majority-still-believes-death-penalty-deters-the-more-serious-crimes\/","headline":"Majority still believes death penalty deters the more serious crimes","name":"Majority still believes death penalty deters the more serious crimes","description":"The case: Convicted Malaysian drug dealer Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam had attempted to bring about 43 grams of heroin into Singapore in April 2009. The verdict: He\u00a0was scheduled to be hanged in November last year.\u00a0 This decision sparked criticism due to concerns he has intellectual disabilities.\u00a0 Between 1991 and 2019, more than 450 prisoners have been [&hellip;]","datePublished":"2022-03-04","dateModified":"2022-04-15","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/author\/tony-goh\/#Person","name":"Tony Goh","url":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/author\/tony-goh\/","identifier":398,"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/wp-content\/uploads\/IMG_3588-copy-100x100.jpg","url":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/wp-content\/uploads\/IMG_3588-copy-100x100.jpg","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"TheHomeGround Asia","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/wp-content\/uploads\/photo_2021-07-22-222533.jpeg","url":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/wp-content\/uploads\/photo_2021-07-22-222533.jpeg","width":640,"height":640}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/wp-content\/uploads\/S3-Feature-1920-x-1080-px-V1-30.jpg","url":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/wp-content\/uploads\/S3-Feature-1920-x-1080-px-V1-30.jpg","height":900,"width":1600},"url":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/destinations\/singapore\/majority-still-believes-death-penalty-deters-the-more-serious-crimes\/","about":["Community","Local","Singapore"],"wordCount":1239,"keywords":["Amnesty International","death penalty","Dr Kevin Tan","K Shanmugamm","Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam"],"articleBody":"The case: Convicted Malaysian drug dealer Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam had attempted to bring about 43 grams of heroin into Singapore in April 2009.The verdict: He\u00a0was scheduled to be hanged in November last year.\u00a0This decision sparked criticism due to concerns he has intellectual disabilities.\u00a0Between 1991 and 2019, more than 450 prisoners have been hanged in Singapore. These statistics were compiled by Amnesty International, an international organisation on human rights, from several sources but detailed statistics were not released by the Singapore government between 2000 and 2006.\u00a0It seems that every time the Singapore courts deliberate on a case that may result in the death penalty, almost everyone has something to say about it.According to Amnesty International,\u201cThere is no evidence that the threat of execution acts as a greater deterrent to crime than life imprisonment, something confirmed in multiple studies, including by the UN, across the globe. Singapore, which regularly tops global indexes for standards of living, lags far behind global sentiment against the death penalty. As of today, the majority of the world\u2019s states have abolished this cruel punishment in law for all crimes.\u201dThe Singapore Government and the majority of Singaporeans, however, respectfully disagree.A 2019 Government survey involving 2,000 Singapore residents revealed that seven out of 10 agreed or strongly agreed that the death penalty is more effective than life imprisonment as a deterrent against using firearms and committing murder in Singapore.\u00a0A similar 68 per cent believed the same about the deterrent effect when it comes to drug trafficking offences in Singapore.Minister of Law and Home Affairs K. Shanmugam on 3 March 2022, told Parliament that \u201cabolishing the death penalty will lead to more drugs being trafficked into Singapore, and hence more drug abusers and more families and individuals being harmed\u201d.Citing preliminary findings from a survey conducted last year, Mr Shanmugam said, &#8220;Majority of Singapore residents support the use of the death penalty and agree that the death penalty deters serious crime.&#8221; He was responding to questions on whether Singaporeans continue to support its use.\u201cOn the question as to whether the mandatory death penalty is appropriate, 81 per cent said it was appropriate for intentional murder, 71 per cent said it was appropriate for firearm offences, 66 per cent said it was appropriate for drug trafficking. And more than 80 per cent also believed that the death penalty had deterred the commission of these offences in Singapore,\u201d he added.While the findings of this survey are still preliminary, Mr Shanmugam said they were given to him with a &#8220;reasonable degree of confidence&#8221;. The survey will also be made public when finalised, he said. The Minister noted that in the four years before and after the introduction of the mandatory death penalty in 1990 for trafficking above 1,200 grams of opium, there was a 66 per cent reduction in the average net weight trafficked.Figures from the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) show that the number of abusers arrested fell from about 6,000 a year to between 3,000 and 3,500 a year today.The impact of the death penalty is also evident in other crimes that attracted capital punishment.For kidnapping, there was a dramatic decrease from an average of 29 cases a year in the three years before to an average of one case a year after.Firearms robbery was a rising trend with 174 cases in 1973. After the introduction of capital punishment in November 1973 for such offences, the number fell by 39 per cent the following year and today, it is rare for such crimes to happen.The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has defended Singapore\u2019s tough laws as instrumental in making \u201cSingapore one of the safest places in the world\u201d.\u00a0However, the MHA emphasised that Singapore does not mete out the death penalty frivolously but reserves it \u201conly for a very limited number of offences, involving the most serious forms of harm to victims and to society, such as intentional murder and trafficking of significant quantities of drugs\u201d, and that there are numerous \u201cjudicial safeguards regarding the use of capital punishment\u201d.What happened in the case of NagaenthranNagaenthran K. Dharmalingam. (Photo source: The Star)Nagaenthran was arrested in 2009, convicted and sentenced to death in 2010.\u00a0He was scheduled to be hanged in November 2021, but the decision had sparked fierce criticisms because he has an IQ of 69, which is recognised as an intellectual disability, and his claims that he had committed the crime under duress.Among the detractors are the European Union (EU), the United Nations Human Rights Council (UN HRC), British businessman Richard Branson, Amnesty Australia\u2019s death penalty campaigner Rose Kukak.The two opposing viewsThe EU Delegation to Singapore \u201ccall on the Singapore authorities to half the execution of Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam, and to commute his sentence to a non-capital sentence\u201d, before adding that the use of capital punishment \u201ccan never be justified, and advocate for Singapore to adopt a moratorium on all executions as a positive first step towards its abolition\u201d.The UN HRC tweeted to \u201curge authorities to halt execution for drug offences\u201d, adding that Nagaenthran has \u201cpsychosocial disabilities\u201d.Dr Kevin Tan, a law professor who holds teaching positions at both the National University of Singapore (NUS) Law School and Nanyang Technological University\u2019s (NTU) S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, says that the deterrent effect is only effective if the crime was premeditated in advance and that the perpetrator has time to consider his options carefully.\u201cIf the perpetrator commits an act of murder in the \u2018heat of the moment\u2019, he would not have had the time to think about its consequences. In such cases, the death penalty would not have the desired deterrent effect,\u201d said Dr Tan, who specialises in Constitutional and Administrative Law.\u201cPeople often just think about the deterrence but not about the possibility that the penalty is inflicted on the wrong person. If there was a mistake, it would be an irreversible one. Even if you don\u2019t come from a religious or moral perspective and just focus on the practicalities, you can\u2019t reverse the action after convicting and hanging the wrong guy. It\u2019s the end of the story,\u201d he adds.While the state might not be able to pay a victim of a wrongful conviction back for his or her lost time and suffering, Dr Tan feels that the comparison is inappropriate &#8220;since the state can still make it up to a victim who is still alive, but if a person is dead, there is nothing you can do to make it up to the victim or the family. The person is just gone.\u201dThere is also the sense of equity and the fear that would-be criminals would be emboldened by the assurance that their lives will not be taken away from them.Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher best summed this up, \u201cI personally have always voted for the death penalty because I believe that people who go out prepared to take the lives of other people forfeit their own right to live. I believe that death penalty should be used only very rarely, but I believe that no-one should go out certain that no matter how cruel, how vicious, how hideous their murder, they themselves will not suffer the death penalty.\u201dAnd as Minister Shanmugam said, \u201cWe prefer not to have to impose the death penalty on anyone. But we have to continue to do what is best for us.&#8221;Join the conversations on TheHomeGround Asia\u2019s\u00a0Facebook\u00a0and\u00a0Instagram, and get the latest updates via\u00a0Telegram."},{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"name":"Destinations","item":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/destinations\/#breadcrumbitem"},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"name":"Singapore","item":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/destinations\/\/singapore\/#breadcrumbitem"},{"@type":"ListItem","position":3,"name":"Majority still believes death penalty deters the more serious crimes","item":"https:\/\/thehomeground.asia\/destinations\/singapore\/majority-still-believes-death-penalty-deters-the-more-serious-crimes\/#breadcrumbitem"}]}]