Singapore/Geneva: Human rights groups today urgently appealed to Singapore to definitively halt the execution of Malaysian national Nagaenthran a/l K Dharmalingam, known as Naga, who has psychosocial disabilities.
Naga was apprehended in 2009 after he crossed the border carrying 42.72 grams of diamorphine, a narcotic analgesic used in the treatment of severe pain. He was sentenced to death in 2010 and has been on death row since.
The Malaysian national was originally scheduled to be executed on November 10, 2021 for drug offences, but a temporary stay was granted today until a final appeal can be heard tomorrow.
Human rights groups said they were seriously concerned that, if the appeal is dismissed, he could still be executed imminently.
“We are concerned that Mr. Nagaenthran a/l K Dharmalingam did not have access to procedural accommodations for his disability during his interrogation. We further highlight that death sentences must not be carried out on persons with serious psychosocial and intellectual disabilities,” UN Human Rights experts stated in Geneva today, according to a release by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
“We are also concerned that his past 11 years on death row has reportedly caused further deterioration of his mental health,” they stated.
Under international law, countries which have retained the death penalty may only impose it for the most serious crimes, that is, those involving intentional killing, the human rights experts also stressed.
“Drug related offences do not meet this threshold,” they said, and claimed that resorting to this type of punishment to prevent drug trafficking was not only illegal under international law, it was also ineffective. “There is a lack of any persuasive evidence that the death penalty contributes more than any other punishment to eradicating drug trafficking,” they claimed.
The experts urged Singapore to ensure Naga was not executed and to commute his death sentence in accordance with international human rights law.
Singapore amended its drugs legislation in 2012, which allowed drug couriers to be sentenced to life imprisonment if they provide substantive assistance to the Public Prosecutor or if in cases of “abnormality of the mind.” In other cases, the death penalty remains mandatory.
“We urge Singapore to further reform its legislation to ensure the death penalty is never compulsory, as mandatory death sentences are inherently over-inclusive and unavoidably violate human rights law,” said the UN Human Rights experts.
“We are further concerned by the decision to carry out an execution during the COVID-19 pandemic and the additional impact of the sentence on Mr. Nagaenthran a/l K Dharmalingam’s family members, who are having to make frantic arrangements to travel to Singapore. This may amount to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment,” they said.
The experts have also asked Singapore to honour its commitment to release data on the death penalty. In its 2011 Universal Periodic Review, Singapore accepted a recommendation to make available statistics and other factual information on its use of capital punishment. The experts have written to the Government of Singapore to express their concerns.
– global bihari bureau