Life & Death


By: Natalie Shobana Ambrose
theSun, Malaysia (pg 12)
July 26th, 2012

An eye for an eye seems to be a fair punishment for many and yet as Gandhi said, it also makes the whole world go blind. For some, the death penalty is imperative and should not be abolished, yet countries like Singapore that have the mandatory death penalty for homicide and drug trafficking, are moving towards removing the mandatory clause but not abolishing capital punishment totally. This allows judges the discretion of life imprisonment and caning as alternatives to mandatory execution.

Some may cringe and interpret this as leniency but the trend against capital punishment has become stronger especially after the 2007 UN General Assembly vote towards the abolition of capital punishment on the grounds of protecting human rights. This has led to a call for (at the very least) moratoriums and restrictions on the death penalty and Singapore is heading in that direction, and we in Malaysia are now talking about it a little bit more for now.

Perhaps it is hard to find that compassion when we know the extent of what drugs do to people. Let’s not talk about the growing list of international celebrities who have died of drug abuse, but of the people trafficking and addicts. There is a chilling sign that drives the point home of mandatory capital punishment in Singapore. It reads 17.9 years old – Imprisonment, 18.0 years old – DEATH. 14.9g heroin – Imprisonment, 15.0g heroin – DEATH.

One has to wonder what happens if there is an error of judgment and the term mandatory allows for no other alternative but to put to death a suspected drug trafficker. Will we be able to wash our hands of an unjust irreversible execution?
Other factors to consider are whether the respect for due process is guaranteed, access to effective legal representation, if the possibility to seek pardon of commutation is possible and if the provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights have been respected.

For years, the death penalty was put in place as a deterrent, but how effective has this been?

Eleven years ago Portugal chose to decriminalise every drug. It didn’t legalise drugs but decided to not punish addicts rather treat them. Of course we’re talking about two different things – traffickers and users. Yet the underlying need for compassion and to look at the issues from a different perspective remains.

In Portugal, decriminalisation wasn’t the only thing that saw a decline in drug abuse, there was a holistic approach to include a “confluence of treatment and risk reduction policies”. In the case of Portugal, users and abusers are not dealt with as delinquents but treated as a public health service taking their case out of the criminal justice system and into a special court which comprises psychologists, social workers and legal experts judging each offender as a unique case. It’s a lot of work not to mention funding needed but it means that now Portugal drug rates are on the lowest tier compared to other EU states. Of course this is a positive example and there are many failed attempts but it still serves as a constructive model.

Perhaps its time that we in Malaysia start a societal dialogue on the issue, as there is not much information readily available and alarm bells ring and images conjured of a rough state with criminals running around when the words “abolish capital punishment” is mentioned. We can seek alternatives?

We tend to associate drugs with a lower level of society and trick ourselves into thinking that drug abuse, drug distribution and trafficking affect a small limited part of society and the lower-income group, yet this is not true. For years, cocaine has been known as the rich man’s drug and there are notorious examples of bankers and politicians (to name a few professions) in the developed/developing world who have easy access to such drugs.

There is no denying that innocent people are put to death even in today’s modern world, maybe it’s time that we at the very least invoke a moratorium to ensure that the irreversible mandatory death penalty does not bind us to take away a person’s right to life.

Natalie believes to be a just, democratic and progressive nation,
we must at the very least drop the word mandatory and
head towards a more humane alternative
Comments: letters@thesundaily.com


Turning A Blind Eye


By: Natalie Shobana Ambrose
theSun, Malaysia (pg 15)
June 28th, 2012
http://www.thesundaily.my/news/419032


"My parents worked and saved their whole lives, and now, the banks have none of their money,” said a young Greek friend.


Moving forward from the emotional devastation of this predicament, the question of what do you do, what can you do in a situation like this arises. Young Greeks belong to a demographic of being well-educated, politically aware and well-travelled, yet they face the reality that youth unemployment has exceeded 40% in their country and have to deal with lower wages, diminishing opportunities and high costs making it very difficult for a talented young generation to stay and make a sustainable living in Greece.

This not only distresses this generation but steals from an unborn generation forcing them to start at a disadvantaged double negative debt.
This is not an isolated story but a reality that resonates through and through for the need of good governance; clean governance in how countries and corporations are run. In May when British MP Tom Watson following a Commons culture, media and sport committee inquiry into phone hacking found Rupert Murdoch guilty of “exhibiting wilful blindness” towards the wrongdoing of his organisation, the statement continued with the MP declaring his personal disappointment at those who could, yet did not hold the most powerful to account.
This layer of gatekeepers is a depleting important resource not just in Europe but very much so in our country. A common phenomenon of lapses in the system are not corrected only to encourage more abuse. It seems like a given that every time a proved accusation is made, the investigation findings state the failure in tendering and awarding processes yet nothing is done.
In Transparency International’s 2011 Corruption Perception Index (CPI), Malaysia ranked 60th, and even though there are complications in measuring corruption this index speaks volumes to the Malaysian who daily witnesses how easily excessive money is spent by the powerful when there are so many struggling to make an honest living. Perhaps, we aren’t managing perceptions very well but it’s not just about managing perception but holding the corrupt accountable that will get us a better ranking. It’s easy to blur the lines of what constitutes corruption, and say that equating wealth to corruption is incorrect so how do we change that perception – by real action not just talk instead of exhibiting wilful blindness.
You can’t drill home the fact that Malaysians are to cut cost, live within their means and tighten their belts and at the same time, state that the country’s anti-corruption commission concluded that there was no corruption in paying 2,805% for two night vision binoculars. This is one of many examples in the last year alone.
It’s safe to say that what most people want of our country’s leadership is objectivity, integrity, justice, fairness, honesty and efficiency in order to be sustainable. In totality, lofty ideals, but what that translates to is a decentralised government, an independent judiciary, an independent police force, an independent election commission, an independent anti-corruption agency, an independent civil service, and for independent advisory panels to consist of people who are truly independent. That is the bottom line and that is the kind of transformation that will truly change perception. While other countries are cutting costs and avoiding austerity plans, we seem to be spending more with little accountability.
Malawi – one of the world’s poorest countries and ranked 100th in the CPI – swore in its first woman head of state two months ago. Joyce Banda made headlines last week when she decided to sell the presidential jet and downsize the government’s fleet of official cars because she felt the US$13 million aircraft juxtaposed against a hungry population did not reflect her presidential goals for the country.
We on the other hand after not achieving our economic growth targets, have recently tabled a supplementary supply bill for an extra RM13.8 billion to spend this year. Yet, there is little accountability as to what has been spent and no tangible answers to why such an excessive supplementary supply bill had been tabled?
Personally this sparks similar fears of what my Greek friend is facing especially when my retirement funds are being used to bail out, buy out and fund everything but my retirement. Will there be funds when I retire?
There is a good deal that needs fixing, and we can no longer afford to exhibit wilful blindness if we truly care for this land we call home and for the generations to come.
Natalie hopes that the rules of corruption investigations will soon be open to public inspection. Comments: letters@thesundaily.com