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Home » Singapore to hang man as activists press for a halt to the death penalty – UK Times
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Singapore to hang man as activists press for a halt to the death penalty – UK Times

By uk-times.com22 September 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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A Malaysian man convicted of heroin trafficking is scheduled for execution this week in Singapore, prompting renewed calls from anti-death penalty activists for a halt to capital punishment in the city-state.

Datchinamurthy Kataiah, 39, faces hanging on Thursday, which would make him the third Malaysian national and the eleventh person executed in Singapore this year. His family received notice on Sunday of the Thursday hanging at Changi prison, according to Kokila Annamalai of Transformative Collective Justice, an anti-death penalty advocacy group.

Datchinamurthy was arrested in 2011 and later convicted of trafficking about 45 grams (1.6 ounces) of heroin into Singapore. He was to be hanged in 2022 but won a last-minute reprieve pending a legal challenge that was dismissed by the court in August.

Singapore’s strict laws mandate the death penalty for anyone caught carrying more than 15 grams of heroin and 500 grams of cannabis. Critics say the law disproportionately targets low-level traffickers and couriers.

Speaking at a joint news conference via video link with Amnesty International Malaysia and the Anti-Depath Penalty Asia Network, Kokila read from a letter from Datchinamurty’s sister, Rani, who has flown to Singapore to spend time with him.

Her brother is not protesting punishment, Rani said in the letter, but believes the death penalty is “too harsh and extreme for a young man’s naive action.”

The three rights groups and 30 other civil society organizations also issued a joint statement reiterating standing calls to halt executions. They said three other Malaysians and a Singaporean man, who had been on death row for drug offenses ranging from 7 years to 10 years, face executions after recently losing their latest appeals.

The Cabinet of Singapore’s Prime Minister Lawrence Wong, who took office last year, had advised President Tharman Shanmugaratnam to show clemency to a Singaporean man on death row for drug trafficking.

The president responded and the man’s sentence was last month commuted to life in prison — the first such clemency since 1998. The three activist groups say it shows change is possible.

The groups also urged neighboring Malaysia — the current chair of the regional ASEAN bloc — to take steps to protect its disadvantaged citizens who are being exploited by drug syndicates.

Malaysia abolished the mandatory death penalty in 2023, replacing capital punishment with prison terms of 30 to 40 years.

Amnesty International’s 2024 global report said Malaysia commuted more than 1,000 death sentences last year.

In contrast, Singapore doubled its executions from five in 2023 to nine last year, with six of those carried out over a two-month period, Amnesty said. More than 40 remain on death row in the city-state.

Amnesty also said that the Asia-Pacific region continues to hold the highest number of executions in the world, but secrecy and restrictive state practices such as in China, Vietnam and North Korea make it impossible to obtain accurate figures.

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