The Star Malaysia

Taiwan mulls death penalty for drink driving

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taipei: Taiwan plans to ramp up punishment­s for those who cause a fatal accident while drink driving, including the death penalty for the most egregious cases, sparking an outcry from abolition and rights groups.

The Cabinet yesterday approved a draft amendment to the Criminal Code that would make death by drink driving an indictable murder offence, potentiall­y punishable by death if the deed is deemed “intentiona­l”, officials said.

The proposal needs parliament­ary approval but comes after a spate of high profile deaths that have generated widespread outrage.

Currently the maximum sentence in Taiwan for causing a death while drunk behind the wheel is 10 years.

The new proposal would increase jail sentences for repeat offenders who commit a new offence within five years of their first conviction.

They face up to a life sentence for causing a death and 12 years for grave injuries.

“Cases of drink driving leading to death are rampant... drunk drivers recklessly caused accidents that took lives and destroyed families to result in irreparabl­e regret,” the Justice Ministry said in a statement.

In one notorious case in January, a 40-yearold man crashed his van into a taxi while driving intoxicate­d, killing three people and injuring three others including himself.

Very few countries employ the death penalty for drunk driving cases. — AFP

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