The life and death of a person is not ours (humans) to decide. It is gods will and only the god can choose when a person can die and why he dies. According to Dangerous Drugs Act 1952 (Laws of Malaysia, 2006), anyone proven guilty of trafficking or selling drug will be sentenced to mandatory death no matter what is their nationality is. It is undeniable that Malaysia is one of the countries that give mandatory death punishment to the drug traffickers.
What is drug? According to Webster drug is defined as a chemical substance used in the treatment, cure, prevention, or diagnosis of disease or used to otherwise enhance physical ormental well being. Initially drug is used to cure illness and diseases but now its use is abused. In Malaysia normally drugs is used in night clubs to create hallucination so that they will do things that they normally won’t do.
There was 22851 drug users detected in Malaysia in 2006 (Communications, 2006). These results were shown in one of the annual journal of UNICEF Malaysia. This amount is equivalent to 1 of 124 peoples living in this country. Thus we can come to a conclusion that 1 of 124 Malaysians are active drug users. The amount is consist of 71.04% of youngsters aged 21 to 29 and 78.30% have only form 3 education.
It is an inevitable to destroy the drug trafficking cycle around the world. According to Whitehall, UK a successful seizure of 60% is needed to put a successful trafficker out of business. But none of the countries ever reported such seizures. No matter what the punishment is this crime seems to never fade in the glory of time.
Death penalty in Malaysia is one of the very prominent topics discussed by the local human rights committee. Since 1960 around 441 persons were sentenced to mandatory death; the amount consists of 228 persons who were killed for drug related offences (Gallahue, 2011). The amount might seem small but think about all the other countries that still giving death penalty for drug abuses. The sum might be a very big.
“We shouldn’t be playing gods”, those are the words of Nora Murat, Director of Amnesty Malaysia (S.BEDI, 2010). Amnesty Malaysia is one of the loudest voices against death penalty in Malaysia. They argue that the death penalty disproportionately affects the poor, affects visible minorities and other marginalised groups. Innocent people have been executed and nothing short of abolition can guarantee that no innocent person will be executed.
But there is still a reason for hope. Each year more countries abolish the death penalty in law or practice. Several UN General Assembly motions have been passed in recent years calling for a universal moratorium on executions with a view to abolition. By far more countries have abolished the death penalty than practice it and each year executions only take place in a small number of countries (SCHABAS, 2010). So let us hope that Malaysia will abolish the death penalty so that no innocents are ever punished.
Reference
1. Communications, U. M. (2006). STATISTICS OF DRUG USERS IN MALAYSIA – 2006. malaysia: UNICEF.
2. Gallahue, P. (2011). The Death Penalty for Drug Offences. United Kingdom: Human Rights Programme of Harm Reduction.
3. S.BEDI, R. (2010, august 9). star. Retrieved 4 11, 2013, from http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=%2F2010%2F8%2F29%2Fnation%2F6894703&sec=nation
4. SCHABAS, P. W. (2010). THE DEATH PENALTY AND DRUG OFFENCES. European Union, 8.