The Borneo Post

S’pore denies ‘coup de grace’ for botched executions

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SINGAPORE: Singapore yesterday denied claims by a Malaysian rights group that it used a brutal “coup de grace” to finish off botched executions and ordered Yahoo and other sites to correct reports of the ma er.

The Malaysia-based Lawyers for Liberty alleged last week that Singapore prison officers had been instructed to manually break the necks of prisoners if the rope used to hang them broke during executions.

This was done by kicking the back of the prisoner’s neck, said the group, which based its report on informatio­n from an anonymous prison officer.

The city-state imposes the death penalty for crimes such as drug traffickin­g and murder, and hanged 13 people in 2018, according to official data.

Singapore’s Ministry of Home Affairs on Wednesday slammed the allegation­s as “untrue, baseless and prepostero­us”, noting that the rope had never broken during a hanging.

It said all executions “are carried out in strict compliance with the law”, and the use of any unlawful method would have been investigat­ed and dealt with.

It accused the rights group of making the allegation­s to try and get reprieves for Malaysian drug trafficker­s.

Using a new law against online falsehoods, the interior minister also ordered Yahoo Singapore, a local activist and a political website to carry correction notices alongside their reports on the issue.

The minister asked Lawyers for Liberty do to the same, but the organisati­on said it would not comply.

“Singapore has no business interferin­g with the freedom of speech of Malaysian citizens making statements within our own country,” the group said in a statement.

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