The court granted a stay of the execution after Nagaenthranâs defense lawyer, M. Ravi, argued that capital punishment for a mentally disabled person was a violation of Singaporeâs Constitution.
Raviâs application was dismissed, but the stay on the execution was granted âpending the hearing of the appeal to the Court of Appeal,â Singaporeâs top court, the lawyer said on Facebook.
The appeal is scheduled to be heard via videoconference on Tuesday. If this fails, the stay will be lifted and Nagaenthran could be executed as scheduled.
Narcotics officers found a small bundle of heroin strapped to Nagaenthranâs left thigh at a checkpoint more than a decade ago. He was sentenced to death in November 2010 under the countryâs strict drug laws. A previous appeal to reduce the penalty to life in prison failed and a final push for presidential clemency was rejected last year.
Death penalty opponents say Nagaenthranâs IQ was disclosed during a trial at the High Court as 69, a level that is internationally recognized as an intellectual disability.
But the court ruled that Nagaenthran knew what he was doing and upheld the death sentence.
Nagaenthranâs family lives in Ipoh in northern Malaysia. Activist Kirsten Han, who helped his mother, two younger siblings and cousin arrange travel to Singapore, told The Associated Press that they have been allowed daily prison visits since arriving last week.
âThe main thing that Iâve heard from Nagenâs younger brother is that Nagen has been disoriented, he doesnât quite make eye contact, and goes between periods of lucidity and confusion,â Han said.
âHis brother even doubts that he fully grasps that his execution date is so close,â she added.
Nagaenthranâs older sister, Sarmila Dharmalingam, who didnât make the trip, said she briefed Nagaenthran about the court outcome during a phone conversation Monday and that the family held out hope for a positive result. He thanked her but didnât say much more, she said.
Dobby Chew of the Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network expressed disappointment that the High Court had dismissed the merits of Raviâs argument.
Chew said he hopes Singapore will give adequate time for the appeal. ADPAN and other human rights groups including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have called the execution of an intellectually disabled man inhumane and a violation of international law.
Legal experts, activists and human rights groups in Malaysia have called for Nagaenthranâs execution to be halted. Malaysian Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob also reportedly asked for leniency âpurely on humanitarian groundsâ in a letter addressed to Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, dated Nov. 3.
On Sunday, the European Union delegation to Singapore, along with the diplomatic missions of Norway and Switzerland, called for the execution to be halted.
âToday, more than two thirds of the countries of the world have become abolitionist in law or practice, which confirms a global trend in favor of the abolition of the death penalty,â they said in a statement.
A petition calling for a presidential pardon for Nagaenthran has drawn close to 65,000 signatures. Family members and friends of 13 current and former death row prisoners also wrote a joint letter to Singaporeâs president on Monday calling for the death penalty to be abolished.
British business magnate Richard Branson also called for Nagaenthranâs life to be spared.
âItâs almost always the most vulnerable people, people struggling to make ends meet, immigrants in need of money, that are roped into criminal schemes, unable to defend themselves when caught and facing the court,â Branson said in a statement Monday.
âItâs impossible not to see the extent to which inequality, poverty and the death penalty are linked,â he added.
Singaporeâs Ministry of Home Affairs said Nagaenthran has been accorded full due process under the law.
âThe High Court had assessed the evidence of the psychiatrists, including the evidence of a psychiatrist called by the defense, on behalf of Nagaenthran, who agreed in court, that Nagaenthran was not intellectually disabled,â the ministry said in response to media queries on Friday.
âNagaenthran considered the risks, balanced it against the reward he had hoped he would get, and decided to take the risk,â it added.
The last execution in Singapore was in 2019.
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This story corrects that the reported date of the letter from Malaysiaâs prime minister was Nov. 3, not Dec. 3.
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Associated Press writer Eileen Ng in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, contributed to this report.