Pubdate: Wed, 22 Mar 2006 Source: New Straits Times (Malaysia) Copyright: 2006 NST Online Contact: http://www.nst.com.my/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3734 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Death+Penalty (Death Penalty) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) EDITORIAL: TO KILL OR NOT TO KILL THAT is the question reopened by the Bar Council over this country's continuing inclusion on the steadily diminishing list of nations with the death penalty. That list now stands at 76, of which 25 or so have not executed anyone for at least 10 years and may be moving towards joining the 122 countries without the death penalty. Some 40 of these have done away with capital punishment in the past 15 years alone, a global trend that has left just four countries accounting for 97 per cent of all judicial executions - China, Iran, Vietnam and the United States. In the process, the death penalty has become tainted as an indicator of a certain social primitivism; an institutionalised savagery that does not speak well of a mature or advancing society. In Malaysia, proponents of the noose continue to draw from deep, dark wells: the death penalty is upheld as pure eye-for-eye justice for murderers; due retribution for rapists, kidnappers and traitors; a deterrent to prospective bad hats; or simply as an awful punitive weapon to keep at hand, to help maintain discipline and order in class, as it were. A strong case could be made for the death penalty for illegal firearms possession having helped spare this country the civil-war zone perils faced by so many others, but death for drug trafficking has done little to stanch the dadah scourge. Different mindsets are involved; the nihilism inherent in drug abuse gives the prospect of death a different flavour. Opponents of the death penalty tend to be few and far between in this country. Their arguments for compassion and respect for human rights and the sanctity of life butt the hard heads of a polity preferring simple and straightforward solutions over delicate philosophical conundrums. If there is a middle path on the way forward, it could be in reviewing the crimes meriting mandatory death sentences or, preferably, restoring judicial discretion, especially as regards the dadah-related offences that account for most executions here. Declaring a mandatory death sentence for dadah was a statement of national disgust, but it has had the effect of tying the system's hands while doing little to solve the problem. It may therefore be too high a price to pay. Such is the cost-benefit analysis that should inform this debate - especially if the death penalty is to be regarded as a measure of a society's respect for life. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom