Thursday, September 17, 2020

Nazri Aziz: Malaysians favour ‘eye for an eye’ punishments

MM Online:

Hard to abolish mandatory death sentence as Malaysians favour ‘eye for an eye’ punishments, says ex-law minister



Padang Rengas MP Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz speaks during an interview at his office in Kuala Lumpur September 15, 2020. — Picture by Ahmad Zamzahuri 


KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 17 — Former law minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz has admitted that it is difficult to abolish the country’s mandatory death sentence, as Malaysians always demand “an eye for an eye”.

He said ignoring public opinion and pushing through the amendments to the law necessary for its removal would inflict collateral damage on any government of the day.

“Well, I don’t believe in the mandatory death penalty. But then again, if you want to touch the law, you must convince the rakyat and our rakyat still feel that it must be an eye for an eye.

“Yes, it cuts across all races,” Nazri, who is a staunch advocate for the abolishment of the mandatory death sentence, told Malay Mail in an interview recently.

In 2018, the then Pakatan Harapan (PH) government announced that it planned to abolish the death penalty and halted all pending executions — in a move that was hailed by international human rights groups.

The death penalty would then be replaced with a minimum 30-year prison sentence.

But in February this year, the PH government said it was still studying the possibility of abolishing the mandatory death penalty but not capital punishment altogether.

A survey published by research outfit The Centre in June, however, found that most Malaysians feel the mandatory death penalty should be retained, especially for brutal crimes like murder, where the perpetrator exhibited high levels of intention and aggression.

The death penalty is currently applicable to 33 offences in Malaysia, including 12 for which it is the mandatory punishment. They are drug trafficking, murder, offences against the King, five offences pertaining to terrorism, hostage taking, organised crime, firearms offences and rape.

Nazri has been right in that the vengeful dictum of an eye for an eye cuts across ALL races. I was shocked to discover (some time back) that over 70% of Chinese (most of whom are Buddhists) still want the death sentence. It's incongruous for Buddhists to demand capital punishment, even for perpetrators. "An eye for an eye" is a biblical demand (of Middle-Eastern tribalism) and applies only for the Abrahamic religions and not for Eastern religions like Buddhism, Taoism and Jainism.

The Kiwis have shown the world how she treats the most evil of murderers, like Brenton Tarrant (an Australian), who killed 51 Muslims as they prayed at two mosques in Christchurch.

The New Zealand court sentenced the self-confessed white supremacist murderer to life imprisonment WITHOUT PAROLE, the first time such a sentence has been handed down in the country. It effectively means the court has thrown the key to his cell away, forevermore.


Supporters of the mosque shooting victims sing outside the Christchurch High Court during the sentencing hearing [Mark Baker/ AP] 

That's all a nation needs, without the need to usurp the prerogative of the Almighty to take away a human life, even that for the most evil of all murderers.


2 comments:

  1. Both Japan and CCP continue to have the Death Penalty.
    For Japan, in practice, it is no longer carrried out, but the Death Penalty is common in CCP-land.

    Taiwan has abolished the Death Penalty, but , as many pointed out, they are overly influenced by liberal Western mores.

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  2. Buddhists believe in re-incarnation. So supporting the death penalty is only logical, because to them it is not the end of life per se....you only lose the right to be in your current life-form as a human, you can come back as an earthworm....ha ha ha.....

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