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Ngyuen Tuong Van's mother
(L) leaves the Singapore Changi Prison. (Photo:
Xinhua/Reuters) |
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Ngyuen Tuong Van's twin arrives
at the Singapore Changi Prison to support just about an hour before his
execution, Dec. 2, 2005 in Singapore. (Photo:
Xinhua/Reuters) |
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(Photo:
Xinhua/Reuters) |
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Khoa Nguyen (R) and his twin
brother's Lawyer Julian McMahon leaves the Singapore Changi Prison.
(Photo: Xinhua/Reuters) |
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Ngyuen Tuong Van, an Australian
citizen in this police handout file photo released Thursday, Dec 1, 2005.
(Photo: CRI/AFP) |
SINGAPORE, Dec. 2 (Xinhuanet) -- Nguyen
Tuong Van, an Australian drug trafficker who had been sentenced to death by a
Singapore court in March last year, was hanged Friday morning at Changi Prison
in the city state, according to a statement by the Ministry of Home Affairs.
Nguyen, 25, was arrested in December 2002 at Changi
Airport and charged with smuggling 396 grams of pure heroin from Cambodia to
Australia via Singapore.
"The Misuse of Drugs Act provides that the death
penalty is mandatory if the amount of diamorphine or pure heroin imported
exceeds 15g," the statement said.
It added that the amount of heroin smuggled by Nguyen
is enoughto supply 26,000 doses to drug addicts with an estimated street value
of 1.3 million Singapore dollars (about 769,000 US dollars).
Nguyen was allowed, on an exception basis, to hold
hands with his mother and brother during a visit a day before his execution.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) said Thursday
that Singapore does not allow "contact" visits between prisoners and family
members like many jurisdictions that authorize capital punishment.
The decision of allowing limited physical contact in
Nguyen's case was made after carefully considering the request that Australian
Prime Minister John Howard had made to his Singaporean counterpart Lee Hsien
Loong at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting held in Malta last week,
and the advice of the Prisons Department, according to MFA.
Singapore had decided not to grant Nguyen clemency
despite several appeals raised by Nguyen himself, his family as well as
Australian leaders, officials and citizens. Enditem |