Criminal Sentencing in the CRPD Era: Lessons from Singapore

Authors

  • Daryl WJ Yang

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19164/ijmhcl.29.1359

Abstract

On 27 April 2022, Singapore executed Nagaenthran K. Dharmalingam, a 33-year-old Malaysian who was convicted of trafficking 42.72 grams of heroin. His execution was carried out despite calls from United Nations (UN) human rights experts, including the Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, for the government to commute his death sentence inter alia on the basis that Nagaenthran did not have access to procedural accommodations for his disability during his interrogation and death sentences should not be carried out on persons with serious psychosocial and intellectual disabilities. Nagaenthran’s execution has put Singapore’s criminal legal system, particularly in respect of its treatment of offenders with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities, under international scrutiny.

Author Biography

Daryl WJ Yang

LLM (Berkeley Law); LLB (NUS Law); BA (Liberal Arts) (Yale-NUS College).

Downloads

Published

2023-06-19

Issue

Section

Articles and Comment