Malaysia’s parliament votes to abolish the death penalty

The amendments will still have to be passed in the upper house of parliament and signed into law by the King.

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Malaysia’s lower house (the Dewan Rakyat) of parliament on Monday approved legal reforms to abolish the mandatory death penalty for some offences.

The law will now go to the country’s upper house (Dewan Negara) and then to the King to be signed.

Under the amendments passed on Monday, alternatives to the death penalty include whipping and imprisonment of between 30 to 40 years. The new jail term will replace all previous provisions that call for imprisonment for the duration of the offender’s natural life.

Malaysia has had a moratorium on executions since 2018, when it first promised to abolish capital punishment entirely.

Life imprisonment sentences, defined by Malaysian law as a fixed term of 30 years, will be retained.

Capital punishment will also be removed as an option for some serious crimes that do not cause death, such as discharging and trafficking of a firearm and kidnapping, according to the new measures.

Deputy law minister Ramkarpal Singh said capital punishment was an irreversible punishment that had not been an effective deterrent for crime.

“The death penalty has not brought the results it was intended to bring,” he said while wrapping up the parliamentary debates on the bill.

The amendments passed will apply to 34 offences currently punishable by death, including murder and drug trafficking. Eleven of them carry it as a mandatory punishment.

The move by Malaysia comes even as some Southeast Asian neighbours have stepped up their use of capital punishment.

Last year, Singapore executed 11 people for drug offences, government data showed, while Myanmar carried out its first death sentences in decades against four pro-democracy activists.

This is a breaking story. More to follow.

Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies