Global Times

Singapore to test public pulse with death penalty survey

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Singapore will gauge public attitudes towards the death penalty in a survey, the interior ministry said Wednesday, as human rights groups renewed calls for its abolition.

The city-state – which staunchly maintains that capital punishment is a crime deterrent – executed eight convicts last year, the highest number in a decade, according to official data. They had all committed drug offences.

The Straits Times said it was the first time that the MHA, which is in charge of the prisons department, is conducting a survey on the subject.

Last week’s hanging in Singapore of convicted Malaysian drug trafficker Prabu N Pathmanath­an sparked fresh calls to scrap the death penalty, a legacy of British colonial rule.

Neighborin­g Malaysia, where the cabinet had decided to abolish the death penalty, had asked Singapore to spare the 31-year-old convict on humanitari­an grounds.

“The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) is conducting the survey to give us a better understand­ing of Singapore residents’ attitudes towards the death penalty,” MHA said in a statement to AFP.

It said the survey is part of the government’s “regular research on our criminal justice system” and involves citizens and permanent residents.

“Participan­ts were randomly selected based on age, race and gender, for a representa­tive sample of the Singapore resident population,” it added.

Some 2,000 respondent­s will be questioned between October and December by market research consultanc­y Blackbox Research, which the MHA has commission­ed for the project, the newspaper said.

Human rights groups said the survey is unlikely to be a prelude to Singapore softening its position on capital punishment.

“There’s been no indication whatsoever that Singapore’s position on use of the death penalty is softening,” said Phil Robertson, deputy director for Asia at Human Rights Watch.

“One wonders whether the MHA is counting on a survey of public opinion to back their views and provide justificat­ion for their continued defiance of the internatio­nal trend towards abolishing the death penalty,” he told AFP.

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