The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Two escape gallows, get jail sentence for drug possession

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PUTRAJAYA: Two men were spared the gallows on Friday in separate drug traffickin­g cases but were instead sentenced to jail after the Court of Appeal substitute­d their charges with that of possession.

Lorry driver Mahadi Abidin, 50, was sentenced to 25 years’ jail for possessing 97.76 grammes of cannabis at a parking area of a Nasi Kandar restaurant in Taman Sejati, Sungai Petani, Kedah on July 15, 2015.

He was spared the rotan as he turned 50 just few weeks ago.

In a another case, Mohd Fadli Yusoff, 41, who formerly worked as a mover, was sentenced to 15 years’ jail and 10 strokes of the rotan for possessing 103.44 grammes of Methamphet­amine at an apartment in Pandan Mewah Heights in Selangor on Jan 3, 2016.

A three-member bench of the Court of Appeal, comprising Datuk Has Zanah Mehat, Datuk Ahmad Nasfy Yasin and Datuk Che Mohd Ruzima Ghazali heard both cases separately on Friday.

Both Mahadi and Mohd Fadli’s cases were separately tried in different High Court and they were subsequent­ly found guilty for drug traffickin­g and sentenced to death respective­ly.

In Mahadi’s case, Justice Has Zanah, who chaired the bench held that his appeal has merits as there was a misdirecti­on in the findings of the High Court judge.

She said Mahadi’s conviction for drug traffickin­g is not safe but she however held that there was sufficient evidence to convict him on a charge of drug possession.

Has Zanah said Mahadi was sentenced to a longer jail terms due to the weight of the drugs and ordered the sentence to start from the date of his arrest on July 15, 2015.

Mahadi’s lawyer S.Jayananda Rao argued that the High Court judge had misdirecte­d herself on the burden of proof imposed on his client when calling him to enter his defence.

Deputy public prosecutor Nahra Dollah appeared for the prosecutio­n in Mahadi’s case.

Earlier, the bench sentenced Mohd Fadli to 15 years’ jail and 20 strokes of the rotan after he pleaded guilty to the charge of possessing the drugs.

He was ordered to begin his jail term from the date of his arrest on Jan 3, 2016.

This was after deputy public prosecutor How May Ling informed the court of the Federal Court’s judgment in Alma Nudo Atenza vs Pendakwa Raya (Public Prosecutor) which the court had struck down a provision in the Dangerous Drugs Act 1952 (DDA) that allowed the use of “double presumptio­ns” to secure the conviction of those accused of drug traffickin­g.

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