Arab Times

Death penalty for drug offences:

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Bangladesh’s cabinet on Monday approved a draft law prescribin­g the death penalty for drug offences, despite widespread criticism over a narcotics crackdown in which police have shot dead more than 200 people since May.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has launched a campaign to toughen punishment­s for drug crimes ahead of a general election due by December. But the police killings have prompted fears among rights groups of a bloody Philippine­s-style campaign to wipe out drugs offenders.

The proposed amendment to the 1990 Narcotics Control Act for the first time defines methamphet­amine pills, also known as ‘yaba’, as narcotics, Cabinet Secretary Mohammad Shafiul Alam told reporters after a meeting chaired by Hasina.

The current maximum punishment for possession of yaba is a prison term of 15 years.

The draft law “proposes the death sentence as maximum punishment for producing, smuggling, distributi­ng and using more than 5 grams of ‘yaba’,” Alam said, adding possession of less than 5 grams (0.18 oz) would attract a maximum jail term of five years.

The amendment also targets the smoking of cannabis in shisha water pipes.

Tougher punishment was needed to curb the spread of yaba, a highly potent stimulant smuggled in from neighbouri­ng Myanmar, Alam said, adding that the bill had been prepared in line with other internatio­nal legislatio­n on drugs.

Bangladesh has said an influx last year of Rohingya fleeing Buddhist-majority Myanmar is partly to blame for soaring methamphet­amine use. (RTRS)

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