A 31-year-old
Nigerian man (name withheld) and a Thai woman, Suracha Chaimongkol, were
on Wednesday, sentenced to death in Vietnam.
The death sentence was passed in a Vietnam court, after the
Nigerian was found guilty of smuggling 3.4 kilograms of methamphetamines
from Qatar to Vietnam.
Vietnam, the communist country’s drug laws, are one of the
strictest in the world, and anyone found guilty of attempting to smuggle
more than 100 grams of heroin or cocaine can face the death penalty.
PM
News reports:
According to AFP, a court in
Vietnam, sentenced the Thai citizen, Suracha Chaimongkol, to death after
she was caught carrying two kilograms (4.4 pounds) of cocaine, the official
Thanh Nien newspaper said.
The drugs were discovered hidden inside
two photograph albums when the 31-year-old graduate landed at Ho Chi Minh
City’s airport in October last year after taking a flight from Brazil.
The identity of the Nigerian was not
immediately disclosed.
Convictions and sentences are revealed
only by local media which is strictly under state control in the communist
nation.
Suracha told the court she did not know
she was carrying the drugs, but said she had been paid to bring the photograph
albums to Vietnam, according to the Thanh Nien report.
After a two-year hiatus in carrying out
capital punishment due to problems procuring chemicals for lethal injections,
Vietnam executed its first prisoner by the method in August.
The country currently has more than 586
prisoners on death row, at least 117 of whom meet all the criteria for
immediate execution, media reports have said.
Although the country does not release
statistics on executions, rights group Amnesty International recorded five
executions in 2011 and said 23 new death sentences were handed out that year,
mainly to drug traffickers.
Foreigners frequently fall foul of the
nation’s stiff drug laws.
In June last year, a Thai design student
was handed a death penalty for trafficking three kilos of methamphetamine, while
in October, a 61-year-old Filipina received the death penalty for smuggling
five kilograms of methamphetamines.
Meanwhile, two British women arrested on
suspicion of trying to smuggle cocaine worth £1.5m out of Peru have been
formally charged, prosecutors have said, skynews.com reported.
Michaella McCollum Connolly and Melissa
Reid, both 20, were moved to a detention centre in Lima after appearing before
the District Prosecutor on Tuesday.
The women face a maximum prison sentence
of 15 years if convicted, the prosecutor’s office in Callao added.
McCollum Connolly and Reid were detained
in Lima last week, accused of trying to smuggle millions of dollars worth of
cocaine into Europe.
The two women have protested their
innocence, saying they were forced to carry items in their luggage at gunpoint.
Peruvian officials say the women were en
route to Madrid and Majorca on August 6 when airport officials discovered
almost 12kgs (26lbs) of cocaine hidden inside food packages in their luggage.
The cocaine was said to have a street
value of some $2m (£1.3m).
They will eventually be taken to the high
security women’s prison Ancon 2, north of Lima.
Sky News was given rare access to the
prison, which is situated in the desert.
Inside, Sarah, a mother-of-two from
Croydon, in south London, is serving a six-year sentence for trying to smuggle
cocaine into Spain.
Speaking to Sky News she said: “To tell
you the truth, to me, all the time that I’ve been here, it’s like being in the
Devil’s House.
“You don’t know when you’re gonna leave
this place, for those girls, caught with so much, they could spend a long time
here.”
Commenting on the women’s current
condition in custody, Peter Madden, the lawyer for McCollum Connolly said:
“They’re both in a holding cell, there are two other women there, but they
haven’t gotten anything to eat today.
“They haven’t been offered any food and
to me that is unacceptable. The conditions inside the holding cells are pretty
grim.
“They are expected to lie almost on the
floor, there is a sort of sponge-type bed which is just not acceptable, there
are no blankets, it’s not clean, and the most important thing is that they
haven’t actually been offered any food today, and it didn’t look as if they
were going to be.”

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