Petition signatures collected: 1,767

Since March 2022, 16 people have been hanged for non-violent drug offences in Singapore. As local and international attention on the state’s killing spree grows, it’s clear that there’s a dearth of information and accountability from the state on who is on death row, the conditions that prisoners on death row suffer, how and when executions are scheduled, and how clemency petitions are considered, among other things. Serious and urgent questions have been raised about why an overwhelming majority of people on death row are ethnic minorities from marginalised backgrounds, how the judicial system is heavily stacked against persons facing capital charges and fraught with risk of unsafe trials, the government’s claims that the death penalty is necessary to deter harmful drug use in Singapore, and the incredible trauma that the death penalty inflicts on families and communities.

We launched #StopTheKilling because we believe that through sincere, brave conversations with families, neighbours and friends, we can make sure that more and more people in Singapore get access to stories, data and analysis, allowing them to come to a more informed, fair and compassionate position on the death penalty. We are confident that, when given the chance to think and feel more deeply, people will see the injustice of the death penalty and the way it strips us of our power, dignity and humanity.

#StopTheKilling is currently focused on :

(A) collecting physical signatures for a people’s petition calling for a moratorium on executions and an independent review of the death penalty regime and,
(B) pressuring parliamentarians to bring the petition into the House for debate.


Singapore’s Death Penalty Regime

Learn about those who have been directly affected by the death penalty in Singapore:

  1. People on death row
  2. Executions

Read up on Singapore’s capital punishment system:

  1. Debunking myths (FAQ)
  2. Legal Challenges
  3. In The News
  4. Abolition Elsewhere