 
 Joint statement on imminent execution of Kho Jabing
We, the undersigned, are troubled by the imminent execution of 
Jabing Kho in Singapore, despite strong concerns over the development of
 his case. We believe there are strong grounds for President Tony Tan of
 the Republic of Singapore to grant clemency in this case.
The family of Sarawakian Jabing Kho, 
31, received a letter from the Singapore Prison Service on 12 May 2016 
informing them that his execution had been scheduled for 20 May 2016. 
Jabing was convicted of murder in 2011.
The announcement came as a shock to the family and all involved in 
campaigning for Jabing. We had been under the impression that the 
authorities would allow his lawyer to submit a fresh clemency appeal on 
his behalf after the criminal motion filed in late 2015 was dismissed in
 April this year. His lawyer had sent President Tony Tan a holding 
letter informing them of his intention to file a new clemency petition, 
and had been in the process of drafting it when the execution was 
scheduled.
On 13 May 2016, Jabing’s lawyer 
received a letter from the President saying that he would be willing to 
consider a clemency petition if it is filed, but will not be postponing 
the scheduled execution. Considering that past practice shows that the 
President usually takes three months before any decision regarding 
clemency is announced, we are concerned that this current state of 
affairs will leave the Cabinet and the President with insufficient time 
to properly consider a fresh plea from Jabing.
We do not condone Jabing’s crime, nor
 do we seek to erase the hurt he has caused to the victim’s family. Yet 
the course of Jabing’s case has been tumultuous and traumatic. Due to 
amendments made to Singapore’s mandatory death penalty regime and 
appeals lodged by the prosecution, Jabing had, over the years, been 
sentenced to death, then life imprisonment (with caning), then death 
again. This back-and-forth has taken a horrific toll not just on Jabing 
as the inmate, but his family.
Furthermore, one High Court judge and two Judges of Appeal had not 
believed that the death penalty was an appropriate punishment for Jabing
 Kho, as they felt that there was insufficient evidence to demonstrate 
that he had exhibited a “blatant disregard for human life”. (See Annex 
A, attached at the end of this statement, for relevant excerpts of the 
judges’ ruling.)
The death penalty does not simply 
exact an irreversible punishment, but also imposes emotional and 
psychological tolls on both the inmate and the family and we oppose it 
unconditionally. Having been re-sentenced twice, from death to life and 
back again, Jabing and his family have already been put through a deeply
 painful process. The knowledge that three respected and honourable 
judges hold the belief that the current punishment does not fit the 
crime simply makes the situation doubly hard to bear.
We believe that Jabing Kho’s case 
presents very strong and persuasive grounds for clemency, and that his 
death sentence should be immediately be set aside and commuted to life 
imprisonment as allowed by Singapore’s Constitution. 
We therefore urge the Cabinet of 
Singapore to advise President Tony Tan to grant clemency to Jabing Kho 
without delay and re-establish a moratorium on executions as a first 
step towards the abolition of the death penalty.
Local Organisations
Community Action Network
Function8
Maruah
Sayoni
Singapore Anti-Death Penalty Campaign (SADPC)
Think Centre
We Believe in Second Chances
Regional/International Organisations
Advocates Association of Sarawak
Amnesty International
Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network (ADPAN)
Center for Orang Asli Concerns
Center for Prisoner’s Rights Japan
Civil Rights Committee KLSCAH
Damn the Dams
Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture (MADPET)
People’s Green Coalition
Reprieve Australia
Sembang-sembang Forum
Suara Rakyat Malaysia
Taiwan Alliance to End the Death Penalty (TAEDP)
The Commission for the Disappeared and Victims of Violence
Victims’ Family Organisations
Journey of Hope
Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights
Ocean
Individuals
Abdul Rashid bin Bakar, relative of inmate on death row in Singapore
Atiqah bte Zaimi, relative of inmate on death row in Singapore
Haminah bte Abu Bakar, relative of inmate on death row in Singapore
Idros Ismail, brother of inmate on death row in Singapore
Jolene Tan, writer and activist
Kokila Annamalai, activist and community organiser
Letchumy Arumugam, mother of inmate on death row in Singapore
Marilyn Siew, activist
Mervin Mikhail
M Ravi, anti-death penalty activist
Osman bin Bakar, relative of inmate on death row in Singapore
Priya Ratha Krishnan, fiancée of inmate on death row in Singapore
Sangeetha Thanapal, activist
Saraswathy Kataiah, sister of inmate on death row in Singapore
Sean Francis Han, activist
Sharmila Rockey, sister of inmate on death row in Singapore
Syida Ismail, sister of inmate on death row in Singapore
Tan Tee Seng, activist
Vanessa Ho, activist
Zaimi Bin Abdul Rahman, relative of inmate on death row in Singapore
Zarah bte Abu Bakar, relative of inmate on death row in Singapore
MEDIA CONTACT:
Kirsten Han, We Believe in Second Chances
kirsten@secondchances.asia
Rachel Zeng, Singapore Anti-Death Penalty Campaign
rachelabsinthe@gmail.com
ANNEX A
Comments from judges on Kho Jabing’s case
Justice Tay Yong Kwang, High Court, 2013:
“After considering all the 
factors put forward by the parties, I am of the view that the death 
penalty is not the appropriate sentence for the convicted person for the
 following reasons:
(a) He was relatively young at 24 at the time of the offence in 2008…
(b) The convicted person’s choice and
 use of the piece of wood during the attack were, in the words of the 
Court of Appeal, “opportunistic and improvisational” and not part of a 
pre-arranged plan. Equally so was Galing’s use of his belt as a weapon;
(c) There was no clear sequence of 
events concerning the attack. There was no clear evidence that the 
convicted person went after the deceased from behind without warning and
 started hitting him on the head with the piece of wood. There was 
evidence that a struggle could have taken place first between Galing and
 the deceased before the convicted person stopped chasing Wu Jun and 
returned to assault the deceased.”
Justice Lee Seiu Kin, Court of Appeal, January 2015:
“…there is insufficient evidence to 
conclude beyond reasonable doubt that Jabing had caused most of the 
fractures (either by multiple strikes or by two strikes with huge 
force).
…the evidence could only prove beyond
 reasonable doubt that Jabing had struck the deceased on the head twice.
 There is also doubt as to whether those two blows were the cause of 
most of the extensive injuries found in the skull, as opposed to causing
 it to fracture and resulting in death.”
“Based on the evidence that I have 
shown to be proven beyond reasonable doubt, I am of the view that the 
threshold is not crossed. Jabing, along with Galing, had intended to rob
 the deceased and his companion, Wu Jun. Jabing had approached the 
deceased from behind and struck him with two wicked blows to the head 
with the intention, at the very minimum, to incapacitate him. But he had
 stopped after that. It was not a case in which he had repeatedly hit 
the deceased after he was down, which would justify the conclusion that 
he had acted with viciousness and blatant disregard for human life. I 
must therefore, with the greatest of respect, disagree with the decision
 of the majority of this court to allow the appeal of the Public 
Prosecutor.”
Justice Woo Bih Li, Court of Appeal, January 2015:
“In the circumstances, and even 
though Jabing’s blows would have been of considerable force, it is in my
 view unsafe to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that he acted in a 
way which exhibited a blatant disregard for human life. I would 
therefore dismiss the Prosecution’s appeal for capital punishment for 
Jabing.”
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment