The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Nigerian, M’sian drug trafficker­s hanged in Singapore

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SINGAPORE: Singapore yesterday executed two foreigners convicted of drug traffickin­g, authoritie­s said, a day after the city-state’s highest court rejected final bids for both men to escape the gallows.

The Nigerian and Malaysian were hanged after their last minute appeals were thrown out.

“A 38-year-old male Nigerian national, Chijioke Stephen Obioha, had his death sentence carried out on 18 November 2016 at Changi Prison Complex,” the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) said in a statement.

Obioha, who came to Singapore hoping to be a footballer, was convicted of traffickin­g 2.6 kilograms of cannabis in 2008. Under Singapore law, anyone caught with more than 500 grams of cannabis can be sentenced to death.

A change in the law in 2013 meant that Obioha could apply to be re-sentenced, opening up the possibilit­y of a life sentence, but he turned it down, the CNB said.

Just before he was to be hanged in 2015, Obioha’s lawyer filed for a stay in execution, which was allowed by Singapore’s highest court, marking the start of a legal rollercoas­ter which saw Obioha applying and withdrawin­g several legal options.

On Thursday, his lawyers launched a final bid to have his sentence commuted to life in prison but were turned down by a threejudge court.

Separately, the CNB also confirmed the execution of 31year-old Malaysian Devendran Supramania­m, who was convicted of traffickin­g heroin.

He was arrested in May 2011 at Singapore’s border checkpoint with Malaysia carrying 2.7 kilograms of a powdery substance that contained 83.36 grams of pure heroin.

Like Obioha, Devendran launched an eleventh-hour appeal on Thursday to stay his execution, but was turned down.

Singapore takes a strong stand against crime and imposes the death penalty on offences such as murder and drug traffickin­g.

But human rights groups, which have called on Singapore to abolish capital punishment, condemned the execution.

“By executing people for drugrelate­d offences, which do not meet the threshold of most serious crimes, Singapore is violating internatio­nal law,” Rafendi Djamin, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific said in a statement Wednesday calling for a halt to Obioha’s execution.

Singapore executed four people in 2015, one for murder and three for drug offences, according to prison statistics. - AFP

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