Press Release
24th of April 2015
ASEAN Civil Society Conference/ ASEAN People’s Forum 2015 (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) ASEAN governments urged to abolish death penalty
Civil society organisations from ASEAN  countries are urging  the grouping’s governments  to impose an immediate  moratorium  on  the  use  of  the  death  penalty  with  a  view of completely  abolishing  the greatest violation of the right to life  - state-sanctioned killing. 
The  “Death Penalty In Southeast Asia: Towards A Regional Abolition” workshop, held in conjunction with the  ASEAN Civil Society Conference/ ASEAN People’s Forum (ACSC/ APF) 2015 in Kuala Lumpur this week,  saw  anti-death penalty advocates in the region  calling for a  cease  in  using the death penalty.  The workshop  was  jointly  organised  by  FORUM-ASIA,  Amnesty  International  Malaysia,  KontraS,  Think Centre, and  Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network (ADPAN). 
"At the ASEAN level, a strict application of the non-interference principle, which emphasises on the respect for  state  sovereignty, in the context of the death penalty  is no longer relevant as the death penalty  is  an  issue  of  all  countries,"  said  Rafendi  Djamin,  the  Representative  of  Indonesia  to  the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR). He  noted that a regional trend towards a moratorium had begun. Singapore had taken a step towards a moratorium  and Malaysia had expressed intentions to consider it.  He added that the AICHR  would continue its thematic study of  the right  to  life  which  will  be  accompanied  by  awareness-raising activities  within  ASEAN  countries, including  organising a workshop with the judiciary in ASEAN. 
Within  Southeast  Asia,  Malaysia,  Singapore,  Thailand,  Indonesia, and  Viet Nam  are  retentionist countries  that  actively use the death penalty. Philippines and Cambodia abolished the death penalty for all  crimes in  2006  and  1989,  respectively,  while  Brunei, Laos,  and  Myanmar have  had  de  facto moratoriums on the death penalty for decades. 
The Deputy  Secretary  of  Policy,  Law  and  Complaints of  SUHAKAM, Nurul  Hasanah  Ahamed Hassain Malim, said that  the belief of  some  government officials that death penalty is a deterrent to crime  and  that  abolishing  the  death  penalty  would  be  going  against  Syariah  law are  the  two  main challenges  to abolishing the death penalty in Malaysia. A positive development,  she added, was that the Attorney-General’s Chambers was conducting a study on the use of the mandatory death penalty for drugs. 
The workshop also allowed anti-death penalty advocates in ASEAN countries to exchange knowledge and best practices to move forward possible policy dialogues member states. 
On  abolition,  the  Philippines’  Human  Rights  Information  Centre's Executive  Director, Dr Nymia Pimentel-Simbulan, said  that  a crucial strategy which led the Philippines to abolish the death penalty  –making it the first country in Asia to do so  – was active  mobilisation  of stakeholders. This, she said included  civil  society  organisations,  the  Catholic  church,  members  of  the  diplomatic  community including  the  European  Union,  anti-death  penalty  champions  in  the  Philippine  Congress,  families of  death row inmates  and  victims’ families against the death penalty. 
“Another key strategy  that resulted in abolition  was comprehensive research on crime statistics and the history of the death penalty’s use that made up a legislative kit used  during debates in Congress,” she said.  "Public awareness and education campaigns as well as case studies of women on death row were among other effective strategies which led to abolition", she added. 
The  workshop’s  speakers  presented  various  practices  and  trends  in  the  region’s  use  of  the  death penalty and discussed the possibility of bringing the agenda of abolishing death penalty to the ASEAN level, especially via  the  AICHR as the body with  the  mandate to promote and protect human rights in the ASEAN region.
Think Centre’s Executive Secretary, Ted Tan, in giving an overview of the use of the death penalty in Singapore,  said  that  the  latest  statistics recorded 21  executions  since  2007. He  shared  that  the moratorium on executions (2011-2014) did not occur because of Singapore undergoing the UPR in 2011  but more likely due to the negotiations with the European Union over a free trade agreement. In fact there were 4 executions in 2011, prior to the UPR session.
He said,  “We can expect  executions  to still continue in Singapore, since the government tightened the definition of capital punishment’s usage and the amended laws were enacted in 2013. Additionally the negotiations on the FTA were mostly completed by then. So to the Singapore administration’s mind, it was probably business as usual.”
He  concluded  that  the  death  penalty  is now  likely  to  be  imposed  on cases  of heinous  crimes like murder,  and  the number of executions for convicted drug traffickers  should be smaller  in  the  future. Puri Kencana Putri of  the Commission for the Disappearances and Victims of Violence (KontraS) briefed  the  workshop  participants  of  its  six-month  fact-finding  mission  on  recent  executions  in Indonesia, where  serious loopholes were found with how the death sentence was meted out. “Elements of  torture,  mistaken  identity, and  delay  in  deaths  for  up  to  15  minutes  during  an  execution  were recorded,” she said.
Puri noted Indonesia’s  strong policy on how the government interprets “most serious crimes”, where the definition encompasses drug trafficking, adding that  “anti-death penalty activists cannot rely on  rhetoric to win the battle against the death penalty in Indonesia.” The way forward, she  said, should include an evaluation of anti-drug agencies in relation to their donors, as well as an increase in public education programmes. 
Another Indonesian speaker,  Jakarta National University sociologist, Dr Robertus Robet, pointed out that the  use of the death penalty  was  escalating under the  administration of  Indonesia’s  Joko Widodo. 
“Six  individuals  were executed  within his first 100 days in office. Another 10 individuals  currently housed in the Nusa Kambangan Island prison  are expected to be executed in the near future.  If plans move forward with the next round of executions, which include French nationals, there would be a bigger  hit back to the Jokowi policy.”
In  closing,  Atnike  Nova  Sigiro,  ASEAN  Programme  Manager  of  FORUM-ASIA, emphasised  “the importance of institutional and legal reform as well as  a  change of culture and values that encourage retaliation and vengeance, for which regional solidarity is indispensable”. As one of the organizers she added, “The  ASEAN  People’s  Forum  is  one  important  venue  to  bring  solidarity  in  abolishing  death penalty in this region”. “Now in Indonesia,  a Philippines citizen, Mary Jane Veloso is one among the list of persons to be executed soon. The conference calls for solidarity from the people of ASEAN to call on the government of Indonesia to stop the execution  of Mary Jane and also for other inmates on the list”  Atnike concluded.
Amnesty  International  Malaysia,
FORUM-ASIA,  
KontraS, 
Think Centre, 
Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network (ADPAN). 
 
 
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