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The execution of Van Nguyen: an Australian perspective

journal contribution
posted on 2006-06-01, 00:00 authored by Mirko Bagaric
The execution of 25-year-old Melbourne man, Van Nguyen, by Singaporean authorities on 2 December 2005 for attempting to smuggle 400 grams of heroin out of Singapore was cruel. It was also futile. Yet, there are three important lessons that can be learned from his killing. The first lesson is that if Australia is to exert genuine moral pressure on nations to abolish the death penalty it must do so in a principled manner, rather than making expedient pleas when Australians happen to be on the wrong end of the cruel practice. Secondly, sentencing practice in Australia, while not condoning capital punishment, is unjustifiably punitive and we should ameliorate the harshness of some of our sentencing laws. Finally, the death of Nguyen, while tragic, was no more tragic than the millions of other preventable deaths that occur daily throughout the world. The compassion displayed toward Nguyen should be used as a catalyst for enlarging our sympathy gland in relation to all preventable deaths. I now discuss these in further detail.

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Location

Dalby, England

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Journal of criminal law

Volume

70

Pagination

215 - 221

ISSN

0022-0183

eISSN

1740-5580

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