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In Singapore, justice condemns a man to death by Zoom


Singapore (illustrative image). – Roslan RAHMAN / AFP

Man sentenced to death via the Zoom video conferencing application at
Singapore. A first for the country, strongly criticized by defenders of
human rights.

Malaysian drug trafficker Punithan Genasan was sentenced to death on Friday hanging in a remote coronavirus hearing, city-state judicial officials said. The Supreme Court said the hearing was held remotely “for the safety of all those involved in the proceedings”.

The right to “see the charge”

The 37-year-old man was found guilty of having sold at least 28.5 grams heroin, a crime punishable by death under strict Singaporean drug laws. This is the first time capital punishment has been passed during a remote hearing, the Supreme Court said.

Human Rights Watch said the technology was completely unsuitable for sentencing such a sentence. “The death penalty is inherently cruel and inhuman, and it gets even worse when Singapore uses technology like Zoom to sentence a man to death,” said Asia organization deputy director Phil Robertson. “It is incredible that the prosecution and the court are so insensitive and that they do not understand that a man threatened with the death penalty has the right to appear before the court to see the accusation,” he said. he continued, questioned by AFP.

The city-state had initially succeeded in containing the spread of the virus, but it is currently facing a second wave of contamination. Singapore has registered more than 29,000 cases of contamination but managed to limit the number of coronavirus deaths to 22.

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