Singapore's execution of 17 people in 2025 marks a cruel escalation of state-sanctioned murder. The death penalty for drug offenses violates international law since these crimes do not meet the required threshold and make rehabilitation impossible. As a practice, capital punishment is both incompatible with the right to life and the standards expected of a modern country.
Singapore's execution of 17 people in 2025 marks a cruel escalation of state-sanctioned murder. The death penalty for drug offenses violates international law since these crimes do not meet the required threshold and make rehabilitation impossible. As a practice, capital punishment is both incompatible with the right to life and the standards expected of a modern country.
Removing the death penalty would save drug traffickers but condemn countless others. Easing pressure on drug trafficking by lifting the death penalty would lead to increased drug supply, crime, violence and drug-related deaths among innocent people — including children. Capital punishment, therefore, is an essential tool to protect Singaporean society.
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