Saturday, March 28, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Indian-Origin Man Executed In Singapore For Drug Trafficking

IANS, 14 Jul, 2017 12:32 PM
    29-year-old Indian-origin Malaysian man was executed on Friday in Singapore for drugs smuggling despite calls by the UN and rights groups to halt his capital punishment.
     
     
    Prabagaran Srivijayan was sentenced to death in 2014 after he was caught with 22.24 grams of diamorphine while trying to enter Singapore.
     
     
    Srivijayan had his death sentence carried out at Singapore’s Changi Prison Complex, said the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB).
     
     
    He was arrested in April 2012 at Woodlands Checkpoint in the main causeway to southern Peninsular Malaysia.
     
     
    Two packets of the drug were recovered from the vehicle he was driving, the CNB said in a statement.
     
     
    On Thursday, Srivijayan’s lawyer, Choo Zheng Xi, on instructions from Srivijayan’s family, asked the Singapore apex court to stay his client’s death sentence on the grounds that his appeal in Malaysia was pending.
     
     
    Judges of Appeal Chao Hick Tin, Andrew Phang and Tay Yong Kwang called the attempt to halt Srivijayan’s execution because of proceedings in another country “an abuse of process”.
     
     
    “The judiciary of each country is entitled to act in accordance with its Constitution and its laws,” The Channel News Asia quoted Judge Chao as saying.
     
     
    “No judiciary of one country interferes in the judicial process of another country,” he said.
     
     
    Srivijayan had a pending appeal before the Malaysian Court of Appeal to institute proceedings against Singapore in the International Court of Justice (ICJ).
     
     
    Amnesty International had raised concerns about the fairness of the trial, including the alleged failure of the authorities “to follow up leads and call on key witnesses that would corroborate his version of events”.
     
     
    The United Nations Human Rights (OHCHR) South East Asia Regional office had called on Singapore to halt the scheduled execution of Prabagaran, and had urged the government to immediately reinstate a moratorium on the use of the death penalty.
     
     
    “Drug-related offences do not fall under the threshold of ‘most serious crimes’. Furthermore, under domestic law, the death penalty is not mandatory for drug-related offences,” the OHCHR said.
     
     
    The Misuse of Drugs Act provides for the death penalty if the amount of diamorphine imported is more than 15 grams.
    His petition for clemency was unsuccessful.
     
     
    Srivijayan was accorded full due process under the law, and he was represented by legal counsel throughout the process, the CNB said.
     
     
    It said that 22.24 grams of diamorphine is equivalent to about 1,853 straws, which is sufficient to feed the addiction of about 265 abusers for a week.
     
     
    Both Malaysia and Singapore execute murderers and drug traffickers by hanging, a system which dates back to British colonial rule.
     
     
    Singapore has consistently maintained that the death penalty is an effective deterrent to crime and has rejected calls to abolish capital punishment. 

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Who Is Devita Saraf? Why Is She Trending On Twitter? Here’s What You Need To Know

    Who Is Devita Saraf? Why Is She Trending On Twitter? Here’s What You Need To Know
    Devita Saraf's trending on social media, but not everyone is happy with her

    Who Is Devita Saraf? Why Is She Trending On Twitter? Here’s What You Need To Know

    Kenyan Women Urged To Withhold Sex Until Their Husbands Register To Vote

    Kenyan Women Urged To Withhold Sex Until Their Husbands Register To Vote
    Kenya's bizarre custom has striking similarities to Lysistrata — an ancient comedy originally known to be performed in 411 BC in Athens.

    Kenyan Women Urged To Withhold Sex Until Their Husbands Register To Vote

    Watching Sexual Objectification Of Women In Ads, Films Makes You Sexist

    Watching Sexual Objectification Of Women In Ads, Films Makes You Sexist
    Regularly watching television shows, films or advertisements that sexually objectify women and degrade them can may make you a sexist person, says a new research.  

    Watching Sexual Objectification Of Women In Ads, Films Makes You Sexist

    German Designer Creates Controversial Anti-Sexual Assault Underwear

    German Designer Creates Controversial Anti-Sexual Assault Underwear
    An Entrepreneur from Germany has created trousers with the aim of protecting women from possible sex attacks while they are out jogging - and the first 150 were sold out immediately.

    German Designer Creates Controversial Anti-Sexual Assault Underwear

    Mysterious American Who Travelled Through 19th Century Central Asia, Served Ranjit Singh

    Mysterious American Who Travelled Through 19th Century Central Asia, Served Ranjit Singh
    But the reason that the life and the career of Alexander Houghton Campbell Gardner (1785-1877) is not known widely because it is seems so "outrageously improbable"

    Mysterious American Who Travelled Through 19th Century Central Asia, Served Ranjit Singh

    Indian-Origin Journalist Becomes Chancellor Of UK University

    Indian-Origin Journalist Becomes Chancellor Of UK University
    Ranvir Singh, 39, becomes the third Chancellor of the university in Preston, the city she grew up in and completed a post-graduate Diploma in Broadcast Journalism from in 2000.

    Indian-Origin Journalist Becomes Chancellor Of UK University