we have laws already tho,we and oz , that we don't enforce or punish properly when we enforce those laws
do we meet out the death penalty for drug dealers that pedal death ? no
this is just stupid and can target any "group" like orange vested people for example
Bikers can't display tattoos, gather in public, wear their insignias in Australia. Penalty? 1-5 years in prison.
the Australian law is targeted against a specific group of biker gangs that have been perniciously involved in criminal activity.
no , I would guess death penalty ?
The Philippines has been dealing with their illegal drug problem with extrajudicial executions.
no , again I would guess death penalty ?
Mandatory death penalty for conviction of the following offenses:
Under Schedule 2 of the
Misuse of Drugs Act,
[53][54] any person importing or exporting more than the following quantities of drugs receives a mandatory death sentence:
- 1200 grams of opium and containing more than 30 grams of morphine (§5 and §7, (2)(b));
- 30 grams of morphine (§5 and §7, (3)(b));
- 15 grams of diamorphine (heroin) (diamo (§5 and §7, (4)(b));
- 30 grams of cocaine (§5 and §7, (5)(b));
- 500 grams of cannabis (§5 and §7, (6)(b));
- 1000 grams of cannabis mixture (§5 and §7, (7)(b));
- 200 grams of cannabis resin (§5 and §7, (8)(b));
- 250 grams of methamphetamine (§5 and §7, (9)(b)).
Death sentences are also mandatory for any person caught manufacturing:
- Morphine, or any salt of morphine, ester of morphine or salt of ester of morphine (§6, (2));
- Diamorphine (heroin) or any salt of diamorphine (§6, (3));
- Cocaine or any salt of cocaine (§6, (4));
- Methamphetamine (§6, (5)).
Under the Act:
any person who is proved to have had in his possession or custody or under his control —
- anything containing a controlled drug;
- the keys of anything containing a controlled drug;
- the keys of any place or premises or any part thereof in which a controlled drug is found; or
- a document of title relating to a controlled drug or any other document intended for the delivery of a controlled drug,
shall, until the contrary is proved, be presumed to have had that drug in his possession.
Furthermore, any person who has a controlled drug in his possession shall be presumed to have known the nature of that drug.[
citation needed]
The majority of executions in Singapore are for drug offences. Since 2010, 23 prisoners have been executed for drug offences, while only five have been executed for other offences, such as murder. Death penalty supporters, such as blogger Benjamin Chang, claim that Singapore has one of the lowest prevalence of drug abuse worldwide. Chang claims, for instance, that over two decades, the number of drug abusers arrested each year has declined by two-thirds, from over 6,000 in the early 1990s to about 2,000 in 2011.
[55] The validity of these figures is disputed by other Singaporeans, such as drugs counsellor Tony Tan.
[56] The
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime notes that Singapore remains a transit destination for drug traffickers in Asia, drug seizures continue to increase, and heroin drug use within Singapore is continuing to rise.
[57]