Monday, February 10, 2025

If Anwar cares about Najib’s suffering, what about Malaysians facing death overseas? (Malaysia Now)

 

If Anwar cares about Najib’s suffering, what about Malaysians facing death overseas?

It is of no use to find out that one is is innocent after being executed.

Charles Hector

Last month, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said he did not wish for former prime minister Najib Razak to suffer in prison.

The compassion is welcome, but does it also apply to all Malaysians, especially those facing execution in other countries, like Pannir Selvam Pranthaman.

More than 70 Malaysians are facing execution in other countries for various offences.-

What is Malaysia doing to prevent Malaysians from being killed?

Has the government done its best to prevent Malaysians from being executed abroad, including in Singapore?

Hopefully, efforts have been made for Malaysians who are at risk of being executed, regardless of their socio-economic status or ethnicity.

Has Malaysia helped to prevent executions by way of legal assistance?

Malaysia has abolished the mandatory death penalty and the Federal Court has commuted the death sentences of hundreds of prisoners on death row.

In December 2024, Malaysia voted in favour of the UN General Assembly resolution on a moratorium on executions pending the abolition of the death penalty, a position Malaysia has held since 2018. Such a resolution is, of course, binding on all UN member states, including Singapore.

Malaysia is therefore obliged to take efforts to abolish the death penalty in Malaysia and also to act urgently to save the lives of Malaysians facing the death penalty in other countries, including Singapore.

Pannir is at risk of being executed any day now. Given the fact that in Singapore, a person can be executed after only four days' notice, it is all the more urgent for Anwar to act fast to save Malaysian lives.

A prison sentence is more than a sufficient penalty, and there is no reason to take someone’s God-given life – and, more importantly, there is always the risk of a miscarriage of justice.

It is of no use if after the execution it turns out that someone is innocent, as in the case of Chiang Kuo-ching, who was found innocent after his execution in Taiwan in 1997.

Singapore should provide all access to court easily, and not make it more difficult, because there is always the possibility that new evidence and arguments will emerge that will lead the courts to acquit or change the judgement.

Malaysia also has the International Transfer of Prisoners Act 2012 and relevant treaties with countries where Malaysians are currently at risk of being sentenced to death, such as the Singapore-Malaysia Prisoner Transfer Agreement to bring prisoners back to Malaysia.

As chair of Asean, Malaysia should advocate for a moratorium on executions and ultimately the abolition of the death penalty.

As Anwar makes many trips abroad to meet with other heads of state, it is hoped that he will also give serious thought to how he can prevent Malaysians from being deprived of their lives.

Charles Hector is part of Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture (Madpet) - Malaysia Now, 10/2/2025

 

Sunday, February 09, 2025

PM Anwar Ibrahim’s cares about Najib’s sufferings in prison but does Malaysia also care about Malaysians overseas at threat of being executed to death like Pannir Selvam - use Treaties and 'Good Relations"

Media Statement -10/2/2025

PM Anwar Ibrahim’s cares about Najib’s sufferings in prison but does Malaysia also care about Malaysians overseas at threat of being executed to death like Pannir Selvam

Use Malaysia’s good relations and treaties like Singapore-Malaysia Prisoner Transfer Treaty to save lives at risk of being judicially executed.

Of late, ‘..Anwar Ibrahim reportedly said he does not wish for disgraced former prime minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak to suffer in prison like he did…’(Malay Mail, 21/1/2025). The Prime Minister’s ‘compassion’ is good, but does it extend to all Malaysians, more so Malaysians at threat of being executed in other countries like Pannir Selvam, a Malaysian Christian.

There are more than 70 Malaysians at risk of being executed in other countries for various offence, and most recently highlighted was Malaysian Paneer Selvam, at risk of being executed in Singapore any time now. ‘Seventy-four Malaysians have been sentenced to death abroad for drug trafficking offences as of early this month, according to Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan. He said that these death sentences were carried out in Brunei, China, Indonesia, Laos, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.’(NST, 17/10/2024) Besides drug trafficking, there will be even more Malaysians facing the death sentence in other nation states for various other crimes. Statistics are important, but what is more important is what has Malaysia done to prevent Malaysians from being killed.

Has the Malaysian government done its best to prevent Malaysians from being executed in foreign countries, including in Singapore?

The Prime Minister and the government must tell us what was done for these Malaysians at risk of being deprived of life, and also the response of these States with regard to Malaysia’s endeavors to save life.

Hopefully equal effort had been taken for all Malaysians at risk of being executed irrespective of their socio-economic status of the said persons and/or their family, religion or ethnicity. Besides diplomatic efforts, has Malaysia also assisted to prevent executions by way of legal assistance, etc.?

The government must transparently reveal efforts taken to keep Malaysians alive, safe from judicial executions.

Malaysia – Death Penalty and Moratorium on Executions

Now that Malaysia has abolished the mandatory death penalty on 4/7/2023, and even permitted the Federal Court by law to review all death penalty sentences that ended in more than 800 (but not all) death row inmate’s death sentence being revised to imprisonment.

Malaysia also once again in December 2024 voted in favour for the UN General Assembly’s Resolution on moratorium of executions pending the abolition of death penalty, a position that Malaysia has taken since 2018. Such a resolution will naturally be binding on all UN member States, including Singapore.

Thus, Malaysia now is OBLIGATED to work extra hard towards abolition of the death penalty in Malaysia, and also to act urgently to save lives of Malaysians facing the death penalty in other jurisdictions, including Singapore.

Singapore and the Death Penalty

On 14/12/2024, ‘According to news reports, 25 prisoners have been executed in Singapore since 2022, with the authorities showing little prospect of softening their approach to capital punishment for drug traffickers.’ (Al Jazeera, 14/12/2024)

It was reported in 2022, that ‘…since 2010, a total of 14 Malaysians have been on death row there with ethnic Indians making up almost three-quarters of them at 11. Two Malays and one ethnic Chinese rounded up the list.’ (Malay Mail, 29/4/2022). Malaysians that have been reported executed by Singapore include Yong Vui Kong(2013), Dinesh Pillai Reja Retnam(2014), Wilkinson A/L Primus(2014), Cheong Chun Yin(2015) and Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam(2022). At risk of being executed at any time soon are other Malaysians including one Pannir Selvam.

Given that in Singapore, a person can now be hanged to death speedily after being given a just a 4-day notice of executions makes it all the more urgent for Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to act fast to save Malaysian lives. The government cannot afford to procrastinate.

Singapore has also amended its laws that makes it even more difficult to those at risk of executions to file court applications.

MADPET (Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture), hopes Singapore will change like Malaysia did, and not execute people anymore. Imprisonment is more than sufficient penalty, and there is no need to deprive one’s God given life – and, more importantly, there is always the risk of miscarriage of justice. It is of no use to find one is innocent after he/she has been executed like in the case of Chiang Kuo-ching who was found to be innocent after he executed in error in 1997 in Taiwan.

Singapore should provide all access to court easily, and not make it more difficult as there is always the possibility that new evidence and arguments may arise that will lead courts to acquit or vary the sentences.

Malaysia’s moral obligation to prevent Malaysians from being executed overseas

Now, Malaysia has the moral authority, to act and urge these other nations not to put Malaysians, and others, to death and to respect the United Nations General Assembly resolution to impose a moratorium on execution pending abolition, which was passed on 17/12/2024, with the support of more than two third majority, with 130 voting in favour, 22 abstentions and 32 voting in opposition. Even for UN Member States that voted against, this UN Resolution on a moratorium on execution reasonably is binding.

Malaysia also has the International Transfer of Prisoners Act 2012, and relevant treaties with countries where Malaysians are currently at risk of being sentenced to death like the Singapore-Malaysia Prisoner Transfer Treaty, to bring back prisoners back to Malaysia.

Given that Malaysia at present have a moratorium on executions, Malaysia can keep ALIVE Malaysians in other jurisdictions about to be killed if they are brought back to Malaysia.

As Chair of ASEAN, MADPET hopes that Malaysia will move ASEAN to also impose a moratorium on execution pending abolition of the death penalty.

MADPET calls on Malaysia to protect the lives of all Malaysians overseas facing the risk of judicial executions, including Pannir Selvam.

MADPET reiterates the call for the abolition of death penalty. For the next step, at least the abolition of death penalty for crimes that caused no one to die.

As Malaysian Prime Minister is famous for his international trips meeting country’s leader, it is hoped that he focusses beyond just economic matters, but seriously consider preventing Malaysian from being deprived of LIFE as is the case of those who are currently awaiting execution. Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim should use Malaysia’s good relations to save.

Charles Hector

For and on behalf of MADPET(Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture)

Last Christmas for Pannir Selvam, death row inmate for drug trafficking

ByAnna Maria Romero

December 28, 2023

SINGAPORE: Pannir Selvam Pranthaman is a Malaysian prisoner on death row in Singapore for heroin trafficking. Arrested in 2014 and sentenced to death three years later, he was granted a stay of execution in 2019, one day before he was to be hanged.

In late 2021, however, the Court of Appeal dismissed his application for permission to start judicial review proceedings. And since judicial executions, which temporarily came to a halt during the COVID-19 pandemic, were resumed at the end of March 2022, Christmas of this year may likely be Pannir Selvam’s last one.

Eleven people so far have been executed in Singapore since March last year, all of whom had been convicted of drug trafficking.

His sisters, Angelia and Sangkari (Shan), recently spoke to the Malaysian national news agency Bernama about their 36-year-old brother, whom they have barely seen since he was imprisoned in Singapore.

And while chances of Pannir Selvam getting another stay of execution are very slim, the women remain steadfast.

“We cannot give up on anyone in our family. The hope is there,” Shan is quoted as saying.

Pannir’s life story…

Pannir Selvam was born in Ipoh to a Christian family in 1987, the third child out of six. His father was a pastor and lorry driver, and his mother was a housewife.

He moved to Singapore in 2010 and worked as a private security officer, later enrolling at Stamford American International School (SAIS). He continued to work, however, and even funded the university education of one of his sisters.

Pannir Selvam, then 27, was discovered carrying 51.84g of heroin into Singapore on Sept 3, 2014, and was arrested. Under Singapore law, anyone found to be illegally trafficking at least 15g of heroin when he or she is arrested faces capital punishment.

In his defence, he said that he had been acting as a drug mule for a man named “Anand” who had asked him to pass the substance to another man named “Jimmy.”

Pannir Selvam claimed he was unaware of the nature of the substance he had been asked to carry. He tried but did not qualify for the substantive assistance rule despite cooperating with authorities in Singapore.

“Pannir has been reflecting on his actions in prison. He’s expressed deep remorse about what he has done. We believe Pannir still has a lot to offer society. Inside prison, he’s been reading, self-studying, and following political news – especially developments on Malaysia Baru.

He has also become a man of faith. If given a second chance at life, he hopes to educate others on drug abuse prevention, and support prison reform programmes,” reads a website aimed at appealing to give him another chance.

A petition to save Pannir Selvam’s life has been shared online and signed by 17,000 netizens. /TISG

Read also: Halt Selvam’s execution, says Asean rights activist - The Independent Singapore, 28/12/2024

A plea for Pannir Selvam


Pannir Selvam’s early life was not one filled with crime, violence, or anything of the sort says the writer. — amnesty.org

ONE OF my best friends lives in Singapore and when I go down to visit, he’ll often take me cycling.

We often start our ride either around Marina Bay Sands or the Stadium area, being sure to pass the Marina Barrage and the Bay East Garden, before going up the East Coast Park.

It’s an absolutely gorgeous ride, with gorgeous views of gorgeous water. And if you follow the East Coast Parkway all the way to the end, you’re not far from Changi Airport, and Changi Prison.

Inside Changi Prison is a 37-year-old Malaysian gentleman by the name of Pannir Selvam Pranthaman, who will likely never experience the beauty of that simple bike ride or anything like it ever again.

Pannir Selvam is currently on death row. In 2017, he was sentenced to death after being caught crossing the border from Malaysia to Singapore with 51.84 grams of diamorphine.

Pannir Selvam’s early life was not one filled with crime, violence, or anything of the sort.

His sister, Angelia Pranthaman spoke of a childhood filled with football, running, video games, music, fashion, church camps and youth activities.

“I remember Deepavali nights were spent in my auntie’s amazing village, surrounded by fruit trees and rivers, waking up to the sweet sounds of birdsong. The night before, we would play cards, sip hot Indian teh tarik and breakfast would always be on the table, ready for us, the next day. It would often be tosai and chicken curry.”

When Pannir Selvam grew older, he started working as a warehouse assistant in Ipoh. He then eventually began working in Singapore, selling children’s educational books and working as a security guard, sometimes taking double shifts.

As has happened far too often with poor and vulnerable people, Pannir Selvam eventually found himself duped by a "friend" into carrying a package across the border.

After his arrest, he did his best to cooperate with the authorities - both on the Malaysian and Singaporean sides of the border. He provided as much information as he was able to regarding who had given him the package, who the bosses were and so on.

The Singapore High Court judge who convicted Pannir Selvam determined that he was a courier. According to Singapore’s Misuse of Drugs Act, as long as a convict is designated a courier, and has been issued a certificate by the public prosecutor stating that they cooperated with the authorities, the court then has the discretion to not impose the death penalty.

For reasons that remain baffling and extremely unclear, Pannir Selvam was denied this certificate by the public prosecutor.

This case is slightly reminiscent of the case of Nagaenthran K. Dharmalingam.

In April 2009, Nagaenthran was caught at the border with 42.72 grams of drugs. He was found to have an intellectual disability, and testified that someone had threatened to kill his girlfriend and his family if he did not perform the task that was asked of him.

Despite a sustained plea for clemency by all kinds of individuals around the world, who emphasised Nagaenthran’s intellectual disability, Nagaenthran was executed in April 2022, after spending 13 years on death row.

After all these years, the primary tragedy seems to be the same: only the weakest, most vulnerable, often unaware links in the drug trade are targeted, and imposed such harsh punishments.

It seems especially tragic that while there seems to be little or no clemency for these drug mules, we can’t seem to recall a single story in which a drug kingpin or mastermind is actually ever caught or prosecuted.

No one who is advocating for clemency and, or, the abolishment of the death penalty is looking to be ‘softer’ on crime. Most are simply pleading for more proportionate penalties, and a greater focus on the true instigators that are driving this ecosystem.

And if the demand for drugs continues to remain so high, perhaps we should be looking more closely at who is driving this demand, and what can be done to stem the problem there, instead on inflicting the harshest possible punishments on the weakest and most voiceless.

At a press conference organised by Amnesty International and the Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network (ADPAN) this last week, Pannir Selvam’s sister Angelia said: “Watching this right now, we feel, so weak right now. And voiceless against the big power. All I can say is, please save my brother.

"He has done all he can do. He doesn’t have to die. He has cooperated. We as a family have been having sleepless nights. We are searching for a way to save him."

Some may not be aware that in his time in prison, Pannir Selvam is still trying to touch and spread beauty in the world, especially through poetry. Here are the excerpts from two poetries composed by Pannir Selvam.

The first is a tribute to his sister Angelia:

“Angel...

Isn’t just her name,

She stays true.

In person and heart,

Just the same,

One and only lil’ sister,

Grace yet fighter,

Of the love of four brothers,

She braces even twister,

Days in, days out,

She fight so hard,

So those cold heart’s.

Can learn to warm up.”

While the second speaks to the struggle of the long, lonely wait on death row:

“In the darkness of night,

I’m bleeding by stabs of silences,

It’s been my loyal companion,

Yet still I stand with resilience,

For me, being alone,

Doesn’t mean, living alone,

I hear whispers in the wind,

Telling me to keep cope,

Voices in my mind,

Telling me to keep hope,

Learn to be strong...

Through all the streams...

In the darkness of night,

Is it possible for the fallen,

To seek the light?

Or are they doomed,

To just sit tight,

To give up without a fight?

I learned, without the dark night,

The moon can’t shine bright,

Without the dark night,

I can’t appreciate the beauty of the starlight...

Even now, they’re out of my sight,

I’ll be there when the time is right.” - Star, 9/2/2025

Silence isn’t an option: Rights groups urge Malaysia as Asean chair to call a stop on Pannir Selvam’s execution in Singapore

Amnesty International Malaysia and Adpan hosts a press cofnerence calling for a stop to Pannir Selvam's execution in Singapore. — Picture courtesy of Amnesty International Malaysia
Amnesty International Malaysia and Adpan hosts a press cofnerence calling for a stop to Pannir Selvam's execution in Singapore. — Picture courtesy of Amnesty International Malaysia

KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 6 – A coalition of civil society organisations has today urged the Malaysian government to take immediate action to prevent the execution of Malaysian national Pannir Selvam Pranthaman in Singapore.

The groups said as the Asean chair, Malaysia has the opportunity to advocate against the death penalty, they said, calling for the government to intervene through diplomatic channels, including direct appeals to Singapore’s leadership.

“As a neighbouring state with close historical and diplomatic ties to Singapore, Malaysia is uniquely positioned to stand up for human rights and safeguard the rights of its nationals facing execution in the country.

“When human rights are at stake, silence is not a tenable option and all possible actions should be undertaken to halt executions and the use of the death penalty, including when it is applied in violation of international human rights law and just across our borders,” Amnesty International Malaysia and the Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network (Adpan) said in a joint statement here.

The groups said that Pannir, who was convicted in 2017 of importing 51.84g of heroin into Singapore, has exhausted all legal avenues and could face execution at any time.

“Pannir’s case has been riddled with several violations of international human rights law and standards,” they said.

The groups claimed that the prosecution did not provide Pannir with a Certificate of Substantial Assistance, leaving no option for the judge but to impose the mandatory death penalty — an alleged violation of his right to a fair trial.

The organisations also criticised Singapore’s use of legal presumptions under the Misuse of Drugs Act, which they said shifted the burden of proof onto defendants and undermined the right to be presumed innocent.

They also highlighted Singapore’s recent acceleration of executions, with eight out of nine individuals executed in 2024 for drug-related offences, and a new law limiting the ability of death row inmates to seek legal reviews.

Pannir has spent years advocating against the death penalty from his prison cell, writing songs and poems that have been shared by Sebaran Kasih, an NGO founded by his sister. His works have been performed by Malaysian artists, including Datuk DJ Dave, Santeshh Kumar and Kidd Santhe.

The statement was endorsed by 18 other organisations, including Lawyers for Liberty, Bersih, Suara Rakyat Malaysia (Suaram), and Sisters in Islam. It was also endorsed by several individuals, including human rights lawyer Andrew Khoo. - Malay Mail, 6/2/2025