Richard Branson invited to debate with Shanmugam on Singapore’s anti-drugs policy, death penalty

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