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Unveiling Singapore’s Death Penalty Discourse: A Critical Analysis of Public Opinion and Deterrent Claims

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While Singapore’s Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) maintains a firm stance on the effectiveness of the death penalty in managing drug trafficking in Singapore, the article presents evidence suggesting that the methodologies and interpretations of these studies might not be as substantial as portrayed.

Life on Death Row in Alabama

Alabama Death Row Cell
If an animal was kept in a small cage barely big enough to turn around in for 23 or more hours per day, given inadequate food, kept in excessive heat, and denied access to others except for two short visits per month, the person who placed that animal there would be violating the law. 

No matter what stance they take on the death penalty, most people have never really had a view of what conditions are like for inmates on death row. In Alabama, over two hundred men and women wake up and go to sleep each day on death row. Imagine if you will, living this life for a week, a month, years, or decades, as many do.

Each inmate, after being sentenced to death row to await his or her execution is placed in a 5x8 feet cell, which includes the room taken up by a cot, toilet and sink. There is no window in the cell, so the only view is the hallway and the four walls. Inmates are issued a towel, sheets, a disposable razor, toothbrush, toothpaste, a bar of soap and two rolls of toilet paper. Everything else they might need is sold to them through the prison store, at inflated prices, and assuming they have someone to send them the money to buy anything. Stamps, writing paper, pencils or pens, socks, underwear, etc are not allowed to be mailed in. All of this must be purchased. So if no one on the outside agrees to send the inmate money each month to "put on their book" in the form of a credit for the store, then the inmate can never write a letter.

There is no air conditioning and without a window in the cell, heat in the Alabama summers gets up over one hundred degrees often. Some inmates have a fan, but when the heat gets so extreme, it only blows hot air. It is usual to hear of an inmate standing in the toilet trying to cool himself. The inmates are allowed out of the cell for an hour, about five days out of each week. They are taken outside by guards and allowed to walk inside a fenced perimeter. Many spend their time just looking at nature, enjoying the feel of the sun.

Hunger is common, On Sundays and holidays, inmates receive two meals per day. The portions are not adequate for grown men, and most say they have to supplement their food intake with items from the store. Boxes of food have been spotted in the kitchen marked with the words "Not fit for human consumption." The breakfast tray is delivered around 430AM, lunch about 10, and dinner at 3PM. Trays for death row inmates are served to the cell, as the inmates are not allowed into the prison cafeteria.


Source: Kathy OGorman, Yahoo! Contributor Network, June 23, 2010

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