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Richard Branson invited to debate with Shanmugam on Singapore’s anti-drth penalty

The British billionaire, who has spoken against Singapore's death penalty, made false assertions in a recent blog post, says the Home Affairs Ministry as it invited him to a live televised debate.

Richard Branson invited to debate with Shanmugam on Singapore’s anti-drugs policy, death penalty
File photo of British billionaire Richard Branson. (Photo: AFP)
22 Oct 2022 06:43PM (Updated: 22 Oct 2022 11:52PM)

SINGAPORE: The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) said it has invited British billionaire Richard Branson to Singapore for a live televised debate with its minister K Shanmugam on the country's approach towards drugs and the death penalty. 

Mr Branson has been vocal in his views against Singapore's death penalty for crimes such as drug trafficking, most recently in a blog post on Oct 10. Earlier this year, he spoke out against the execution of convicted drug trafficker Nagaenthran Dharmalingam.

In response to his blog post, MHA said in a media release on Saturday (Oct 22) that he made false assertions about alleged racial bias and the treatment of defence lawyers. 

The ministry also reiterated Singapore's stance on drugs, saying that the capital sentence has had a clear deterrent effect on drug traffickers in Singapore.

"Our priority is to protect Singapore and Singaporeans from the scourge of drugs," said MHA. "We take a comprehensive harm prevention approach, which includes the use of the death penalty for traffickers who traffic large amounts of drugs and seek to profit from destroying other people’s lives and livelihoods."

In inviting Mr Branson to a debate on the issue, MHA said: "Mr Branson’s flight to and accommodation in Singapore will be paid for.

"Mr Branson may use this platform to demonstrate to Singaporeans the error of our ways and why Singapore should do away with laws that have kept our population safe from the global scourge of drug abuse."

In his blog post on Oct 10, Mr Branson said that Nagaenthran had a “well-documented intellectual disability” and was hanged despite that.

"We have clarified on several occasions that this is untrue. The Singapore Courts held that Nagaenthran knew what he was doing and that he was not intellectually disabled," MHA said on Saturday. 

"Mr Branson also suggests that Singapore had breached our international commitments to protect people with disabilities by carrying out the capital punishment on Nagaenthran. This too is untrue, as Nagaenthran was not intellectually disabled."

Mr Branson also alluded to the suspicion of alleged racial bias and that those executed in recent times were small-scale drug traffickers.

"This assertion is false. Mr Branson probably picked it up from some activists in Singapore with their own agendas," the ministry said.

"Our laws and procedures apply equally to all, regardless of background, nationality, race, education level or financial status. Every person who faces a capital offence is accorded full due process under the law. Their trials are transparent and open to the public and media."

Defence lawyers have never been penalised for representing and defending accused people, said MHA in response to the businessman's claims of "harassment" of lawyers. 

"However, this does not mean that lawyers can abuse the court process by filing late and patently unmeritorious applications to frustrate the carrying out of lawfully imposed sentences," the ministry said, pointing to Nagaenthran’s case.

"Mr Branson is entitled to his opinions," it added.

"These opinions may be widely held in the UK, but we do not accept that Mr Branson or others in the West are entitled to impose their values on other societies. Nor do we believe that a country that prosecuted two wars in China in the 19th century to force the Chinese to accept opium imports has any moral right to lecture Asians on drugs.

"Singapore's policies on drugs and the death penalty derive from the country's own experience, said MHA, adding: "Nothing we have seen in the UK or in the West persuades us that adopting a permissive attitude towards drugs and a tolerant position on drug trafficking will increase human happiness.

"Where drug addiction is concerned, things have steadily worsened in the UK, while things have steadily improved in Singapore."

Source: CNA/fh(gs)


‘People are struggling with cost of living and you’re offering to pay this billionaire to debate with you?’ — Netizens react to MHA’s debate challenge to Richard Branson

"I don't see why MHA should pay for his flight and accommodation. He's a billionaire... He can take his (own) flight. He owns virgin air. Don’t waste our tax money." — Netizens

October 24, 2022
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On Sunday (Oct 23), Singaporeans woke up to the news that the Ministry for Home Affairs was inviting British billionaire Mr Richard Branson to a live televised debate with the Minister for Home Affairs and Law, Mr K Shanmugam, on the country’s approach towards drugs and the death penalty.

The MHA had released a statement the day before clarifying certain statements that  Branson, a vocal opponent to the death penalty, had made concerning Nagaenthran Dharmalingam, who was judicially executed on April 27, 2022.

Last year, Branson joined the chorus of global voices urging Singapore to stay the execution of Nagaenthran due to his intellectual disabilities.

“The Singapore Courts held that Nagaenthran knew what he was doing and that he was not intellectually disabled,” the MHA wrote in its statement.

On Oct 10, World Day Against the Death Penalty, Branson penned a blog post titled “What’s the matter with Singapore?”

“Singapore still finds itself on the wrong side of history is its continued, almost stubborn use of the death penalty, particularly for drug offences,” he wrote.

The businessman noted that there have been eleven executions this year, adding that “circumstances surrounding many cases have been dark stains on the country’s reputation in the world.”

The MHA’s statement sought to clarify Singapore’s approach towards drugs, as well as several other issues Branson raised in his post.

And at the end of the statement, the invitation to debate was given, with the MHA adding that the billionaire’s flight to and accommodation in Singapore would be paid for. 

“Mr Branson may use this platform to demonstrate to Singaporeans the error of our ways and why Singapore should do away with laws that have kept our population safe from the global scourge of drug abuse,” the ministry added.

Reactions from netizens to MHA’s invitation have been mixed, with some saying that given today’s difficult economic times, perhaps there are more pressing issues to deal with.

“Pls don’t waste our money on this Ang moh !” wrote one commenter.

Others were less polite in expressing their views.

One even suggested that a debate over Zoom, which would certainly cut costs, would suffice.

Others, however, seemed eager to see the debate.

“Bring it on then. You have a worthy opponent representing us,” wrote one.

/TISG

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