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SINGAPORE: A prominent lawyer who supports the use of the death penalty in the context of drug trafficking lambasted an article in Petir, the official organ of the ruling People’s Action Party.

In a Facebook post on July 17 (Wednesday), Yeoh Lian Chuan described the article as “terribly low-quality drivel”, adding, “It is quite disappointing that this level of thinking is what the PAP’s mouthpiece stands for.”

The piece, which has no author indicated, is titled “The delusions of the anti-death penalty activists,” and was published on May 10 this year.

It criticized the actions of individuals and groups that have spoken up against capital punishment in Singapore as “virtue signalling.” It also said the activists are “either naïve at best or plagued by a saviour complex.”

It added that “Singapore might be an outlier when it comes to drugs, but it is a badge of honour we hold dear and part of our exceptionalism.

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Perhaps when anti-death penalty activists stop their chase for virtue, they might start seeing drug traffickers for what they are. Scourge of the earth and proxy murderers who do not deserve our sympathy.”

Mr Yeoh expressed dissatisfaction with the perspective taken in the piece and called capital punishment an issue of “deep moral significance.”

He added that it is an issue that various people may have “honest, reasonable, deeply held beliefs” regarding whether a State may take one’s life as a punishment for crime, and if this is the case, which crimes are so grave that they are deserving of such final sanction.

Significantly, he added, “Bearing in mind also that all human acts, include the justice system, are perforce fallible.”

Several Facebook users have commented on his post, including one who opined that he was curious about the ruling party’s approach to Petir.

He added, “It almost seems as if the Party has deliberately decided to use the party organ to channel its MAGA-like elements.”

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Mr Yeoh agreed that “Petir has a distinct MAGA slant” and wrote that he doesn’t “favour this type of political rhetoric.”

As of this year, among the 193 member states and two observer states in the United Nations, 53—or 27 per cent, have kept the death penalty in law and practice.

Amnesty International noted in May that the number of executions last year rose to its highest number since 2015.

Among the 1,153 executions that took place in 2023, 508 executions were for drug-related offences, including five that were reported to have taken place in Singapore. /TISG

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