Malaysia to end all mandatory death sentences as capital punishment fades in Southeast Asia

2024-12-26 11:44:31 source:lotradecoin advanced order types category:Markets

Kuala Lumpur — Malaysia's parliament passed a bill Monday to remove mandatory death sentences, with rights groups welcoming the vote as an "important step" that could have a knock-on effect elsewhere in Southeast Asia. Convictions for several offenses, including murder and drug trafficking, previously came with automatic death penalties, giving judges no leeway.

An activist holds a sign against the impending execution of a man sentenced to death for trafficking heroin into Singapore, during a gathering outside the Singaporean Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, April 23, 2022. Vincent Thian/AP

The bill does not scrap death sentences, but grants judges the option to instead impose lengthy prison sentences of between 30 to 40 years under certain conditions.

Speaking before the lower house of Malaysia's parliament, Deputy Law Minister Ramkarpal Singh said: "We cannot arbitrarily ignore the existence of the inherent right to life of every individual."

Malaysia has had a moratorium on executions since 2018, but courts have continued to send inmates to death row.

The reform will still have to clear the senate, but is widely expected to pass without major opposition.

  • Florida Senate OKs easier path to imposing death penalty

Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phil Robertson called Monday's vote an "important step forward for Malaysia," and said he hoped it would increase pressure on other Southeast Asian nations to follow suit.

"This is an important breakthrough that will cause some serious conversations in the halls of upcoming ASEAN meetings," he told AFP, referring to the 10-member Southeast Asian bloc.

"Malaysia should show regional leadership by encouraging other governments in ASEAN to re-think their continued use of the death penalty, starting with Singapore which has recently gone on a post-COVID execution spree."

Last year, Singapore, a prosperous city-state, hung 11 people, all of them for drug offenses.

Myanmar's junta has also resumed using death sentences after a decades-long pause.

Cambodia and the Philippines are the only ASEAN members to have fully abolished capital punishment.

While Malaysia's vote stopped short of ending capital punishment, Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network executive coordinator Dobby Chew welcomed the vote as a "good way forward."

"We have data that shows that the death penalty doesn't change anything," he told AFP.

    In:
  • Drug Trafficking
  • Death Penalty
  • Capital Punishment
  • Murder
  • Malaysia
  • Asia

More:Markets

Recommend

How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast

After 14 years, the police procedural "Blue Bloods" is coming to an end.Season 14 has been released

Federal judge rules protesters can’t march through Republican National Convention security zone

MADISON, Wis . (AP) — A federal judge ruled Monday that protesters can’t march through a security zo

Massive dinosaur skeleton from Wyoming on display in Denmark – after briefly being lost in transit

A huge dinosaur skeleton has made a transatlantic journey from the United States to the Museum of Ev