Published:
Sunday December 1, 2013 MYT 9:00:00 AM
Updated: Sunday December 1, 2013 MYT 9:17:41 AM
Updated: Sunday December 1, 2013 MYT 9:17:41 AM
Malaysians believe in death penalty, but not willing to mete it out, survey shows
KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysians believe
in the death penalty but do not want to impose it - even on perpetrators
of the most serious crimes.
This seemingly contradictory attitude was among the findings of a
recent study by the Death Penalty Project (DPP) on the mandatory death
sentence in Malaysia for murder, drug trafficking and Firearms Act
(Increased Penalties) Act offences.
According to the public opinion survey, Malaysians prefer
incarceration, either jail without parole, or an indeterminate life
sentence with consideration of parole, or a determinate period of years.
The Malaysian Bar and Suhakam want the Government to abolish the
mandatory death penalty or, in the interim, give judges the discretion
to impose capital punishment.
Bar president Christopher Leong and Suhakam chairman Tan Sri Hasmy
Agam are making this call again in light of the survey findings and the
high number of recommendations the Government received on the matter
from United Nations member states on Oct 24 during its Universal
Periodic Review (UPR) at the Human Rights Council (HRC).
The Government has until March to tell HRC whether it will accept the recommendations.
As at June 2013, a total of 964 Malaysians have been sentenced to
death for crimes for murder, terrorism-related offences, drug
trafficking, robbery with firearms and firearms possession, kidnapping,
and treason.
While the number of firearms offences are increasing, Malaysian Crime
Prevention Foundation vice chairman Tan Sri Lee Lam Thye had noted in
July that the death sentence had not deterred the drug trade.
According to the Federal Narcotics Department, 85,500 people,
including foreigners, were arrested for drug-related offences in the
first half of 2013 and the seized drugs were valued at RM48.11mil,
almost double the amount for the same period last year.
Its statistics show more than 190 Malaysians were arrested overseas
for being drug mules since 2011, some in countries like China and
Indonesia which also impose the death penalty.
In July last year, Attorney-General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail said
Malaysia might follow Singapore’s move to abolish the mandatory death
penalty for drug couriers.
He said they were researching whether to give judges the discretion
of imposing it and also to re-sentence those on death row to life
sentences.
Because of the amendments in Singapore, Sabahan Yong Vui Kong escaped
the gallows with life imprisonment and 15 strokes of the cane at a
re-sentencing on Nov 14.
Leong said in an interview that the call from the international
community at the UPR was supported by the door-to-door survey of 1,535
Malaysian citizens between Nov 8, 2012 and Dec 28.
“The findings, launched in July, show there would be little public
opposition to the abolition of the mandatory death penalty for the three
offences.
“A large majority favoured the death penalty, whether mandatory or
discretionary - 91% for murder, 74-80% for drug trafficking depending on
the drug, and 83% for firearms offences.
“But when presented with 12 ‘scenario’ cases, only 1.2 persons in 100 thought it was the appropriate punishment.”
Hasmy, who had attended Leong’s briefing for parliamentarians on Nov
14, said the findings showed Malaysians were not in favour of mandatory
death sentences and preferred giving judges the discretion.
Leong said the Bar advocated the abolition of the death penalty on
the belief that every individual has the inherent right to life as
guaranteed under the Federal Constitution.
“Guilty persons ought to receive punishment but that is not the same as saying that they ought to die.
“The death penalty is a reflection of the notion that ‘an eye for an
eye’ provides the best form of justice but this is a concept we should
not embrace nor practise today, bearing in mind there is still no
criminal justice system in place which is foolproof.”
As a result of the growing political and public debate here on
whether the mandatory sentence should be abolished completely or
retained and used only in the gravest of circumstances, Leong said, the
DPP, a leading international human rights organisation, commissioned
Prof Emeritus Roger Hood - an eminent criminologist from Oxford
University - to design, analyse and report on the findings of the
large-scale public opinion survey on the mandatory death penalty for the
three said offences here.
The research was carried out by Ipsos Malaysia, a market research company. - The Star, 1/12/2013, Malaysians believe in death penalty, but not willing to mete it out, survey shows
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