FMT:
Singapore executes Malaysian K Datchinamurthy
The 39-year-old was arrested in 2011 and sentenced to death four years later for smuggling 44.96g of diamorphine into Singapore

K Datchinamurthy was arrested in 2011 and sentenced to death in 2015 for smuggling diamorphine into Singapore. (Facebook pic)
PETALING JAYA: Singapore executed 39-year-old Malaysian K Datchinamurthy this afternoon for smuggling 44.96g of diamorphine into the island state.
Singapore’s central narcotics bureau confirmed the execution in a statement, maintaining that Datchinamurthy was “accorded full due process under the law and was represented by legal counsel during trial and appeal”.
It added that his clemency petitions to the Singapore president were unsuccessful.
“Capital punishment is imposed only for the most serious crimes, such as the trafficking of significant quantities of drugs which cause very serious harm, not just to individual drug abusers, but also to their families and the wider society,” said the bureau.
Datchinamurthy’s execution was initially scheduled for this morning but was halted, with the family notified after receiving a call from Changi prison after midnight. No reason was disclosed.
Singaporean activist Kokila Annamalai said the prison called the family around 1.40pm today to inform them that Datchinamurthy’s plea for clemency had been rejected by the Singaporean president and that his execution would go ahead.
In a Facebook post, she said the family was told to collect the body at 3pm but the prison refused to state what time the execution would take place.
“The family repeatedly pleaded for a last visit or phone call, and when that was refused, asked if they could pass Datchinamurthy a message through the prison officer on the line. The prison said ‘no’ to that, too.
“There are no words to describe how degrading, cruel and outrageous this treatment is, with the family’s dignity and sanity toyed with so sadistically,” said Kokila.
Datchinamurthy was arrested in 2011 and sentenced to death in 2015. He was scheduled to be executed in 2022 but obtained a stay of execution pending a legal suit against the Singapore government over his death sentence.
He was one of four Malaysians on death row in Singapore whose cases the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia had urged the government to intervene in.
The other three are P Pannir Selvam, S Saminathan and R Lingkesvaran.
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Are there any Singaporeans on Death Row in Bolehland?
ReplyDeleteThree Singaporeans are among four men who face the death penalty for drug trafficking in Malaysia. The trio – Quek Kien Seng, 45, Tristan Chew Jin Zhong, 25 and Ivan Tan Zhi Xuan, 31 – were charged on Thursday morning (Jun 26) along with Malaysian Kong Sien Mee, 51, at the magistrates’ court in Ampang, Kuala Lumpur.
The mules are part of the deadly machine, without which the machine cannot function.
ReplyDeleteYes, the masterminds need to be caught , but the mules are not just "silly"...they are an essential part of the Drug Death Machine.
It's not like they were not warned.
I always believe in adults of sound mind having to take the consequences of their actions after being given Full Fair Warning.