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One of the few industrialized countries with death penalty!

VIBGYOR

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Japan hangs 4 convicted killers
By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press Writer
42 mins ago

TOKYO – Japan hanged four convicted killers Thursday, amid criticism that the country's secretive and slow-moving justice system leaves inmates to languish on death row for decades.

Japan, one of the few industrialized countries that still has capital punishment, has boosted the pace of executions in recent years. The country hanged 15 people last year — the most since 1975 when 17 were executed, Justice Ministry official Katsuhisa Nagata said.

Though capital punishment has broad support in Japan, which is among the safest nations in the world, many critics say the system needs to be reformed because condemned criminals are often left waiting on death row for years. There are currently about 100 people on death row.

Others say the system is too secretive. Inmates do not know when they will be executed until the morning of their hanging. Executions are conducted in secret, and lawyers and family are only notified after the fact.

On Thursday, Shojiro Nishimoto, 32, was hanged at the Tokyo Detention Center after he had been convicted on four counts of murder and robbery. He killed three senior citizens who lived alone in separate attacks in April 2004, and a 59-year-old taxi driver in 2003.

Yukinari Kawamura, 44, and Tetsuya Sato, 39, also were hanged. They had been convicted of kidnapping a coffee shop owner and his wife in the central Japanese city of Nagoya in April 2000, then driving them to a remote forest and burning them to death.

Tadashi Makino, 58, was hanged for stabbing someone to death and assaulting two other people in the southern city of Kitakyushu in 1990.

The rise in executions has triggered strong protests from rights groups including Amnesty International, and Japan's bar association has proposed a moratorium on executions.
 

singveld

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Industrialized nation that still have death penalty.

USA. Japan, Singapore and Australia.

Singapore is worse, they only kill poor people. poor people who were force to traffic drug, while the druglords intact and still doing business as usual.
 

Maximilian Chua-Heng

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Industrialized nation that still have death penalty.

USA. Japan, Singapore and Australia.

Singapore is worse, they only kill poor people. poor people who were force to traffic drug, while the druglords intact and still doing business as usual.

Is Singapore truly industralized? I think more like urbanized.
 

HTOLAS

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Industrialized nation that still have death penalty.

USA. Japan, Singapore and Australia.

Singapore is worse, they only kill poor people. poor people who were force to traffic drug, while the druglords intact and still doing business as usual.

A correction - Australia has abolished the death penalty for many years now.

In some ways, Singapore's death penalty policy is worse than Japan's. First, we have mandatory death penalties for many offences, including drug trafficking and the discharge of firearms in the course of committing a crime. This means that judges have no discretion with the punishment they can mete out once they find that someone has committed these crimes.

Second, by default executions go unannounced, before or after the fact. Our compliant Presstapo cooperates by not asking. It is only when particular crimes have attracted widespread attention, e.g. Nguyen Van Tuong and Flor Contemplacion (international press), Tan Chor Jin, Adrian Lim, Anthony Ler (local interest) that the authorities are forced to announce their executions.

This silence means we do not know how many people are executed and what their profiles are. We also do not know if their deaths have served someone else's higher purpose, except perhaps in the case of Tan Chor Jin.

I find this situation very disturbing. Equally disturbing is the government's refusal to debate this openly. All they say is a large proportion of Singaporeans support it. If so, why the reticence to engage in a dialogue?

Just my thoughts.

Happy New Year.
 

The_Latest_H

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If there's a referendum that people have voted upon to rescind or retain the law, by popular demand, then one would expect the government to follow the will of the people by the majority vote.

As such, its premature to say that every Singaporean wants the death penalty abolished. What's more important is that our system should follow this theme of "no innocent person should end up on death row, and no person guilty of a capital offence should go free"- and operate within the framework of "innocent till proven guilty".

If the system respects both as the way to operate in capital cases and in all other cases, I believe less people- especially those who have sufficient evidence to prove their innocence- will get hanged for no reason. At least they will get their time to state their case to the judge.
 

singveld

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A correction - Australia has abolished the death penalty for many years now.

i guess that left USA, japan and singapore.

i guess we have to follow UN ruling.
UN say singapore is industrize, then it is,
does not matter what you think singapore is and is not.
personally i think singapore is not even a country. it is just a city, either belong to malaysia or indonesia sooner or later.
 
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