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https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...execution-to-drug-mule-a-day-before-scheduled




Court of Appeal grants stay of execution to drug mule a day before scheduled hanging

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Selina Lum
Law Correspondent

SINGAPORE - A day before he was scheduled to hang on Friday (May 24), a Malaysian drug mule on death row got a temporary reprieve after the Court of Appeal granted him a stay of execution.
Pannir Selvam Pranthaman, 31, applied for his death sentence to be stayed on the basis that he intends to mount a legal challenge against the rejection of his petition for clemency to President Halimah Yacob.
On Thursday (May 23), a three-judge Court of Appeal granted his request, noting that Pannir Selvam was told of the rejection and his execution date just one week in advance.
This did not leave the prisoner much time to obtain legal advice on what options he has to challenge the rejection of his clemency plea, said Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon.
He added that Pannir Selvam's Singapore lawyers, Mr Too Xing Ji and Mr Lee Ji En, who were instructed only on Thursday, could not be expected to mount a fully developed argument in such a time frame.
CJ Menon said: "There are extremely narrow grounds upon which the clemency process may be so impugned. However, in our judgment, the applicant ought to have a reasonable opportunity to take advice on whether he can mount a successful challenge."


During the hearing, Mr Too raised questions about the "lack of transparency" of the clemency process in relation to Pannir Selvam, who was convicted of importing 51.84 g of heroin in 2017.

The court heard that two letters sent to his family - one from the Istana rejecting the clemency petition and the other from the Singapore Prison Service stating his execution date - were both dated May 17.
In an affidavit, Pannir Selvam said his family had courier receipts to show that the letters were posted out on May 16.
He took issue with the sequence of events, arguing that he has been deprived of a fair clemency process.
In response, the prosecution, represented by Senior Counsel Francis Ng, submitted affidavits from the Istana, the Attorney-General's Chambers and the prisons, to set out the sequence of events.
Mr Benny Lee, principal private secretary to the President, said in his affidavit that prior to May 7, Madam Halimahhad been advised by the Cabinet that the law should be allowed to take its course in Pannir Selvam's case.
On May 7, Mr Lee signed letters informing Pannir Selvam and his family that the death sentence would stand. These letters were sent to the prisons on May 14, to be forwarded to the prisoner and his family.
In a statement addressing Malaysian media reports about the case, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) said the petitions were carefully considered.
The President acted on the advice of the Cabinet, in accordance with the Constitution, in not exercising the clemency power, said the statement on Thursday.
The ministry also clarified reports claiming that Pannir Selvam was unreasonably denied a certificate of substantive assistance, which might have spared him the mandatory death penalty.
"MHA would like to clarify that the decision is taken by the Public Prosecutor in his sole discretion, based on whether the offender had provided the authorities substantive assistance that leads to the disruption of drug trafficking activities in Singapore. The Public Prosecutor determined that he had not," it added.
This issue was not pursued in court by Mr Too, who focused on the clemency process.
He argued that it was still not clear when the decision was made, why the letters were post-dated, and why the decision had not been communicated earlier to his client's family.
He said his client was deprived of the time to consult a lawyer to see if there were any grounds to file a judicial review against the rejection of his clemency petition.
The court, which also comprised Judges of Appeal Judith Prakash and Steven Chong, directed Pannir Selvam to file his intended application and supporting evidence in two weeks.
The prosecution will have two weeks to respond, then both sides have another week to file written submissions, before a hearing date is fixed.
Challenges against the clemency process are rare.
In 2011, the Court of Appeal held, in the case of Malaysian drug trafficker Yong Vui Kong, that decisions on clemency are subject to judicial review only in relation to procedural lapses, and not on their merits.







 

tun_dr_m

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8 More! 8=HUAT!


https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...b-operation-heroin-seized-8-arrested-11558402


Singapore About 2.8kg of heroin seized, 8 arrested in CNB operation

Heroin and Ice seized in an operation conducted by CNB on May 22, 2019. (Photo: CNB)

23 May 2019 04:34PM (Updated: 23 May 2019 04:40PM)
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SINGAPORE: Eight suspected drug offenders were arrested on Wednesday (May 22) and drugs worth about S$247,000 were seized.
The drugs included about 2.8kg of heroin and 519g of Ice, said the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) in a media release.


CNB's operation took place in the pre-dawn hours of Wednesday.
Officers deployed in the Chai Chee Road area saw two suspects arriving in a car. Another suspect, a 51-year-old stateless man, then entered the car and got off a short while after to return to his hideout, a fourth-floor unit in the same area.
The 51-year-old suspect was arrested after officers raided the unit. Three more suspects who were in the unit were also arrested.
CNB said about 656g of heroin and 2,379g of tobacco believe to be laced with new psychoactive substances (NPS) were recovered in a bedroom.


About 710g of heroin was recovered in the living room, and a small about of Ice was recovered from two of the suspects.

The interior of the car which was intercepted along Tampines Avenue 10 in CNB operation on May 22, 2019. (Photo: CNB)


Meanwhile, CNB officers from the Special Task Force unit tailed the car which was seen at Chai Chee earlier and intercepted it along Tampines Avenue 10.
The driver and a male passenger were arrested, said CNB, adding that about 513g of Ice and 1,419g of heroin were seized from the vehicle.
The driver was brought to his hideout in the vicinity of Sumang Lane in Punggol, where a small amount of heroin and Ice were recovered.
Another two men were arrested in the unit, said CNB.
More drugs were found when officers searched a motorcycle belonging to the passenger of the car.
Apart from the stateless man, the rest of the suspects are Singaporean. Investigations into the drug activities of all the suspects are ongoing.
CNB said the amount of heroin seized is enough to feed the addiction of about 1,330 abusers for a week, while 519g of Ice can feed the addiction of 296 abusers for a week.
Source: CNA/ad(gs)
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KuanTi01

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Asset
All these sideshows are really cruel and dehumanising. In the end, it's all for show. He will still be hanged.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
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What a bloody waste of time. He should have asked for an early execution to get it over and done with.
 

syed putra

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For several billion years since the big bang the guy was nothing, and soon, he could be nothing again.
 

laksaboy

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I don't believe drug mules should be executed, the death penalty should be reserved for murder, terrorism and treason.

And executions should be done publicly, perhaps at the Marina Bay Floating Platform. Great educational spectacle for kids and tourists.
 

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'Not tenable' for Singapore to go easy on Malaysian drug offenders: Shanmugam
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'Not tenable' for Singapore to go easy on Malaysian drug offenders: Shanmugam
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Home Affairs and Law Minister K Shanmugam. (File photo: TODAY)
By Kevin Kwang
24 May 2019 12:11PM
(Updated: 24 May 2019 04:55PM)
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SINGAPORE: It is “not tenable” for Singapore to go easy on Malaysian drug offenders who are caught on this side of the Causeway, said Home Affairs and Law Minister K Shanmugam on Friday (May 24).

Speaking at the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) Workplan seminar, Mr Shanmugam mentioned the case of Pannir Selvam Pranthaman, the Malaysian who was granted a stay of execution on Thursday by the Court of Appeal, saying he was accorded full due process at every stage.

The 31-year-old was convicted of trafficking 51.84g of heroin at Woodlands Checkpoint in September 2014.

"You bring in 51, 52 grams of pure heroin, it is equal to over 4,000 straws of heroin, and (it) feeds hundreds for a week. A person like that is a dealer in death, no two ways about it,” Mr Shanmugam said, but did not go into specific details as the case is before the courts.

READ: Clemency petitions for Malaysian on death row 'carefully considered': MHA

Malaysia’s Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Liew Vui Keong said on Friday in a Malay Mail report that he was "pleased to know of the stay of execution" for Pannir Selvam and had liaised with counterparts in Singapore with the blessings of Malaysia's Foreign Office.

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Mr Shanmugam gave some observations about drug traffickers coming from Malaysia. He said that there are some from Malaysia's ruling Pakatan Harapan (PH) coalition party who are "ideologically opposed" to the death penalty and that they "have to respect that position".

"At the same time, we do impose the death penalty in Singapore, and I expect that Malaysia will respect that position as well," he said.

Singapore received three requests from Malaysia to intervene in executions since the PH government came into power a year ago, and two of these were drug traffickers, he added.

He pointed out that a majority of Singaporeans supported a tough anti-drug stance, including the use of the death penalty against drug traffickers.

Last week, the results of a study by the Ministry of Home Affairs showed 69.6 per cent of Singaporeans polled indicated that the death penalty is an appropriate punishment for criminals who traffic a large amount of drugs.

READ: Younger Singaporeans' support for capital punishment for drug traffickers below national average: MHA survey

"It is not tenable to give a special moratorium to Malaysians, and impose it on everyone else, including Singaporeans who commit offences which carry the death penalty," Mr Shanmugam said.

The minister added that nearly 30 per cent of drug traffickers caught in Singapore last year were Malaysians and nearly 30 per cent of the heroin found, by weight, was brought in by Malaysians. One in five of the heroin traffickers who brought in amounts that attracted the death penalty were Malaysians too, he said.

"How do we go easy on Malaysians in the face of these stats? And if we did, what will it mean for the rule of law? It will become a joke if there is a request made and we go easy. That is not the way Singapore works," he said.

MORE PRACTICAL SOLUTIONS NEEDED

Mr Shanmugam said he intends to write back to his counterpart Mr Liew to discuss ways to address this issue of cross-border drug offences and to "get to the root of the problem".

One of the things he wants to bring up is to find out how many drug offenders are picked up by Malaysian authorities on their side of the Causeway.

He said it would be good for both sides if drug traffickers were caught by Malaysian authorities, as the offenders can be dealt with according to Malaysia's laws and not have to face Singapore’s capital punishment.

He will also ask about efforts to catch drug kingpins operating from Malaysia who are "too scared" to come into Singapore.

"We have good cooperation with Malaysian agencies; they do a good job, we cooperate effectively. And I hope they can be given every support, and we can get more evidence on the other kingpins operating in Malaysia to be picked up," Mr Shanmugam said.

Another thing he wants to suggest is to publicise Singapore’s laws regarding drug offences to communities in Malaysia that are more susceptible to being lured to bring drugs into Singapore.

"(The message would be) don’t traffic (drugs) into Singapore. And if you do, these are the consequences," Mr Shanmugam said.

He reiterated that it is "simply not doable to keep asking Singapore not to carry out the penalties imposed by the courts".

"We really cannot allow Singapore to become a place where traffickers can come in at will, use us as a transit point, flood our country with drugs, and then when caught, they say 'we do not know'," Mr Shanmugam said.
Source: CNA/nc(mi)
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Malaysian minister denies interfering with Singapore court case on death row inmate
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Malaysian minister denies interfering with Singapore court case on death row inmate
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Malaysian minister denies interfering with Singapore court case on death row inmate
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Minister in the Prime Minister´s Department Liew Vui Keong. (Photo: Bernama)
26 May 2019 06:26PM
(Updated: 26 May 2019 06:41PM)
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PUTRAJAYA: A Malaysian minister on Sunday (May 26) denied that he interfered with Singapore's decision to grant a stay of execution to a Malaysian citizen on death row.

Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Liew Vui Keong said that such allegations were "totally unfounded and baseless" and were "purely a figment of an imagination on someone's part".

READ: Clemency petitions for Malaysian on death row 'carefully considered': MHA

READ: 'Not tenable' for Singapore to go easy on Malaysian drug offenders: Shanmugam

His comments comes after Home Affairs and Law Minister K Shanmugam said that it was "not tenable" for Singapore to go easy on Malaysian drug offenders who have been caught.

Mr Shanmugam had mentioned the case of Pannir Selvam Pranthaman, who was granted a stay of execution just a day before he was due to be executed.

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The 31-year-old was found guilty of carrying 51.84g of heroin at Woodlands Checkpoint in 2014.

Mr Liew, who is also in charge of law and parliamentary affairs, said on Sunday that he had spoken to Singapore's Senior Minister of State for Law on Wednesday regarding the case, as he was unable to speak to Mr Shanmugam, who was not available at that time.

With the blessings of Malaysia's foreign minister, Mr Liew said he had communicated with the Singapore government and wrote an email where he "made a representation based on valid legal grounds".

"The allegation that I have interfered with their judicial system is totally unfounded and baseless. It’s purely a figment of an imagination on someone’s part," said Mr Liew in the statement.

The Malaysian minister said he was issuing the statement to "avoid further confusion and unnecessary innuendos" as there had been serious allegations made against him "by a certain quarter across the causeway".

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==

Singapore Court of Appeal Pannir Selvam
Pannir Selvam's lawyers and family pose for a photo outside the Singapore Court of Appeal. (Photo: Bernama)

Singapore has received three requests from Malaysia to intervene in executions since the Pakatan Harapan government came into power a year ago, and two of these were drug traffickers, according to Mr Shanmugam.

He noted that there are some from PH who are "ideologically opposed" to the death penalty and that they "have to respect that position".

"At the same time, we do impose the death penalty in Singapore, and I expect that Malaysia will respect that position as well," he said.

"It is not tenable to give a special moratorium to Malaysians, and impose it on everyone else, including Singaporeans who commit offences which carry the death penalty," Mr Shanmugam added.

He also said that both sides should discuss how to tackle cross-border drug offences and "get to the root of the problem".

"We have good cooperation with Malaysian agencies; they do a good job, we cooperate effectively. And I hope they can be given every support, and we can get more evidence on the other kingpins operating in Malaysia to be picked up," Mr Shanmugam said.

I RESPECT DECISION OF SINGAPORE'S COURT: LIEW

Mr Liew said even though he had not read the grounds of the decision, it was obvious that the Singapore court made its decision after having considered the prevailing circumstances and the rule of law applicable to the case.

"It is therefore equally untenable to allege that there’s an interference on my part to their judicial process.

"I, and so is everyone of us here in Malaysia, respect the decision of the Singapore’s Court," Mr Liew said.

Pannir Selvam had applied for more time to file a fresh application to impugn the clemency process.

The inmate and his family was notified of the president's rejection of his clemency petition and the scheduled date of his execution in letters just a week in advance.

In an affidavit, Pannir Selvam had questioned the transparency of the clemency process, saying he was "surprised" the letter from the Istana about the clemency rejection and the letter from Singapore Prison Service informing him of his execution were both dated May 17.
Source: Bernama/ad(aw)
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If this Jiu Hu chap is an african,,,he will be able to get away with it,,

Nigerian spared death sentence after Court of Appeal acquits him of importing drugs into Singapore
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
File photo of the Supreme Court which is made up of the Court of Appeal and the High Court.
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
By Lydia Lam

27 May 2019 01:20PM (Updated: 27 May 2019 02:45PM)
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SINGAPORE: A Nigerian man facing the gallows for importing drugs into Singapore eight years ago was spared death on Monday (May 27) after the Court of Appeal acquitted him of his capital charge.
Three judges found that the prosecution had failed to establish that Adili Chibuike Ejike knew that there were drugs in his suitcase when he entered Singapore on Nov 13, 2011.

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Adili was 28 when he was caught with two packets wrapped in tape in his suitcase at Changi Airport Terminal 3. He had arrived in Singapore from Lagos, Nigeria via Doha, Qatar.
The two packets were identified after his suitcase was placed through an X-ray machine. During the scan, an image of darker density was seen on one side of the case.
A physical search yielded nothing incriminating, but the case was taken to the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority Baggage Office where the packets were found hidden under the inner lining of the suitcase.
The contents of the packets were found to be methamphetamine, also known as Ice. Adili was arrested and in June 2016 convicted of importing 1.961kg of meth under the Misuse of Drugs Act.

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He was sentenced to death about a year later by trial judge Kan Ting Chiu, but appealed against his conviction and sentence.
According to court documents, Adili had been jobless in Nigeria after his business failed. He approached an acquaintance in Nigeria for help and that person agreed to give Adili a sum of money if he delivered a suitcase to an unspecified person in Singapore.
Adili then applied for his first passport in 2011 and travelled to Singapore with the suitcase, which was handed to him by a childhood friend who had been working with the acquaintance.
During the trial, Adili had maintained that he did not know that the meth bundles were in his suitcase. In one of his statements, he had said: "Somebody gave those substance [sic] to me. I did not know what it was. If I knew what they were, I would not have accepted to carry those things."
However, the trial judge had rejected his evidence, finding Adili to be an unreliable witness as there were several inconsistencies between his oral testimony and investigation statements.
COURT OF APPEAL LAYS OUT THREE REQUIRED ELEMENTS
Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon, along with Appeal Judges Andrew Phang and Judith Prakash, said in their decision that three elements had to be proven for the offence of importation.
First, Adili must have been in possession of the drugs. Second, he must have had knowledge of the nature of the drugs, and third, the drugs must have been brought intentionally into Singapore without prior authorisation.
The central issue was whether Adili was in possession of the meth, said the court. The element of possession required not just proof of physical possession, but also an element of knowledge.
A person who is not aware that an item - which turns out to be a controlled drug - is in his possession cannot be said, in a legal sense, to be in possession of that item, the court found.
The court found that Adili had not been wilfully blind to the existence of the drugs in his suitcase. This was because it would not have been possible for Adili to have discovered the drug bundles, which were discovered only after the inner lining of the suitcase was cut open.
He also could not have found out about the drugs by asking the people who had handed him the suitcase in Nigeria, since they were intent on keeping the truth from him, and would not have told him about the hidden drug bundles even if he had asked, said the judges.
Adili, who was represented by lawyer Mohamed Muzzamil Mohamed, cried in court after he was acquitted.
Chief Justice Menon said the appeal highlights "how important it is that the prosecution and the defence (and, indeed, the courts) remain alert to the precise effect and implications of conceding particular facts as to what the accused person did or did not know".
"We appreciate that this is by no means an easy and straightforward matter, and, in fairness to the judge, he was not helped in the discharge of this difficult task by the fact that the defence misunderstood the requirements of the element of possession and therefore wrongly conceded the fact of possession; while the prosecution proceeded on the basis that the appellant did not actually know of the existence of the drugs, before then seeking to have that very fact presumed to be true," he said.
"Had the parties properly set out their respective cases at the trial below, it would have been clear that what was in issue was the fact of possession, and that given the prosecution’s concession that the appellant did not actually know of that fact, that fact could only be established by proof beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant had been wilfully blind to the existence of the drugs."
Source: CNA/ll(aj)
Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...nce-appeal-acquits-import-drugs-meth-11568524
 

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Apex Court dismisses appeals by Malaysian man on death row for 9 years for importing drugs
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
The entrance of the Supreme Court in Singapore.
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
By Lydia Lam

27 May 2019 05:25PM (Updated: 27 May 2019 05:30PM)
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SINGAPORE: The Court of Appeal on Monday (May 27) dismissed two appeals by a Malaysian man who has been on death row for nine years for importing drugs into Singapore.
Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam, 31, was convicted and sentenced to death in November 2010 for importing 42.72g of heroin a year before.

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He had been caught in April 2009 while entering Singapore from Malaysia at Woodlands Checkpoint with a bundle of diamorphine, or heroin, strapped to his thigh.
He had admitted to Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) officers that he knew the bundle contained heroin, explaining at the time that a friend known only as "King" had strapped it to his thigh so that no one would find it.
Nagaenthran's first appeal was to be re-sentenced under amendments to the Misuse of Drugs Act that were passed in 2012.
The amendments allow a court to sentence a drug offender to life imprisonment instead of death if they were merely a courier, on the condition that the public prosecutor issues the offender a certificate of substantive assistance - for helping CNB to disrupt drug trafficking activities.

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Additionally, the court must also sentence the offender to life imprisonment if he or she was merely a courier and also suffering from an abnormality of the mind.
Nagaenthran's second appeal was for a judicial review into the public prosecutor's decision not to issue him a certificate of substantive assistance.
Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon, Andrew Phang, Judith Prakash, Chao Hick Tin and Belinda Ang on Monday upheld the High Court's decisions to dismiss both Nagaenthran's appeals.
COURT OF APPEAL UPHELD HIGH COURT JUDGE'S DECISIONS
The five judges found that Nagaenthran's vacillation between various accounts of why he had committed the crime did not aid his case, and instead contradicted his original reason - that he needed money - given in statements to CNB.
Nagaenthran had mounted a defence claiming he had delivered the bundle under duress from King, who allegedly assaulted him and threatened to kill his girlfriend.
He had also given an alternative account where he had transported the bundle out of a misguided sense of gang loyalty, but the court upheld the High Court's decisions to reject both defences.
Nagaenthran had been referred in 2013 to the Institute of Mental Health (IMH) for a forensic psychiatric evaluation, in order to assess if he was suffering from an abnormality of the mind and therefore suitable for resentencing under the 2012 amendments.
However, the IMH report found that Nagaenthran had no mental illness at the time of the offence and was not clinically mentally retarded, although his borderline range of intelligence might have made him more susceptible to believing King's purported threat to kill Nagaenthran's girlfriend.
He would not have failed to grasp that the package most likely contained drugs, and that bringing it into Singapore was illegal, said the report.
"This account has all the marks of being an afterthought, since it only emerged in late 2016," said the five judges.
Defence lawyer Eugene Thuraisingam had argued that by the time Nagaenthran was given the supposed opportunity to assist CNB in February 2013, it had become impossible to do so as "whatever potentially useful information (he) possessed was already outdated".
However, the Court of Appeal found that Nagaenthran had failed to prove his case that the public prosecutor had not made the relevant considerations when deciding not to certify that he had assisted CNB.
His lawyer told CNA that his next step is to make a petition to the president for clemency.

Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...-by-malaysian-man-on-death-row-for-9-11569176
 
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