World

Singaporeans strongly support death penalty for serious crimes: studies

71.4% of respondents in one study agree to mandatory capital punishment for murder

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 19 Oct 2022 2:00PM

Singaporeans strongly support death penalty for serious crimes: studies
Singaporean activists protesting the death earlier this year in April. According to a study commissioned by the Home Affairs Ministry, 74% of respondents have however agreed or strongly agreed that the death penalty is justified for the most serious of crimes. – AFP pic, October 19, 2022

SINGAPORE – There is very strong support in Singapore, among its citizens and permanent residents, for the use of the death penalty as punishment for serious crimes such as intentional murder, use of firearms, and drug trafficking.

This is according to findings from three studies commissioned by the republic’s Home Affairs Ministry published under the “Publications” section of its website today.

One of the studies, titled “Attitudes towards the Use of Capital Punishment” found that 74% of respondents agreed or strongly agreed that the death penalty was justified for the most serious of crimes.

The study was commissioned by the ministry in 2019 and conducted by Carol Soon and Shawn Goh of the Institute of Policy Studies.

To a specific question on the “mandatory death penalty”, the study found that 71.4% of respondents strongly agreed that the death penalty should be mandatory for intentional murder, 61.5% for intentionally trafficking a substantial amount of drugs, and 60.1% for the illegal use of firearms.

“Mandatory death penalty” means that the sentencing court must impose the death penalty on the offender once he is found guilty of that crime, and has no power to impose any other type of sentence, the study clarifies.

The study also found that 78.2% of respondents believe that the death penalty serves as a deterrent to serious crimes in general.

In relation to drug trafficking, the study showed that 78.9% of respondents believed that the death penalty deters people from trafficking substantial amounts of drugs into Singapore; and 70.8% believed that it was more effective than life imprisonment.

Another study titled “Perception of Residents in Regional Cities on Singapore’s Crime Situation, Law, and Safety”, meanwhile, found that 87.2% believed that the death penalty makes people not want to traffic substantial amounts of drugs into Singapore.

The study also found that 82.5% believed that the death penalty was more effective as a deterrent than life imprisonment for drug trafficking.

The study was commissioned by the MHA Home Team Behavioural Sciences Centre and conducted in two phases in 2018 and 2021 respectively.

The third study, meanwhile, was conducted by the MHA Research and Statistics Division in 2021, titled “Survey on Singapore Residents’ Attitudes towards the Death Penalty”. – Bernama, October 19, 2022

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