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Vigils, prayers mark Nguyen execution
The Courier-Mail (Australia) ^ | 12/01/05 | AAP

Posted on 12/01/2005 3:22:47 PM PST by Buford T. Justice

Vigils, prayers mark Nguyen execution

02dec05

VAN Tuong Nguyen went to the gallows this morning amid silent protests in Australia and a vigil by his twin brother at Singapore's Changi Prison.

The Australian drug trafficker was to be hanged at 6am local time (9am AEDT) after the Singapore government ruled out any last-minute reprieve.

There was no immediate official notification of the execution, but in Melbourne a church where Nguyen went to school tolled its bell 25 times - once for every year of his life.

In Singapore and in cities across Australia, there were protest vigils to mark the first execution of an Australian since Michael McAuliffe in Malaysia in 1993.

In Singapore, 45 minutes before his execution, Nguyen's brother Khoa arrived alone in a taxi in the pre-dawn gloom to be close to where his twin was to die.

In another taxi behind him, close friends of the Melbourne man, Kelly Ng and Bronwyn Lew, arrived with his lawyer Julian McMahon.

Together they walked into the prison's visitor centre, where they were to wait for the execution to be carried out.

"They want to be as close to Van at this time as possible," said Mr McMahon.

Nguyen's mother Kim would, at the time of execution, be praying at a Singapore chapel with well-wishers, he said.

Kim Nguyen and Khoa were yesterday allowed limited contact with Nguyen during their last visit, after officials ruled out a final embrace.

They were told they would be able only to hold hands with Nguyen, but it today emerged Kim Nguyen was also able to touch her son's face and hair.

"There was a grille and they were able to hold each others hands. Kim was able at least for some time to touch his face," Mr McMahon said outside Changi Prison this morning.

"She told me she was able to talk to him and touch his hair.

"That was a great comfort to her.

"She is obviously incredibly upset, but she is more prepared than she has been at any time previously."

This morning, Nguyen was to be led to the gallows at precisely 6am local time.

His lawyers said the 25-year-old would likely carry rosary beads, and walk without shackles from his cell to stand on the trapdoor of the gallows before his hanging.

It is understood that a hearse will be sent to Changi Prison to collect his body at about 11am local time (2pm AEDT).

Mr McMahon said prison authorities would hold a coronial inquest. A death certificate would be issued and the body would be identified by Australian High Commission staff.

"The body will taken and prepared for burial in Australia," said Mr McMahon.

As the time for execution came and went, there were emotional scenes outside the prison.

A small group of Singapore activists gathered, holding photos of Nguyen and chanting Indian incantations.

Human rights lawyer M. Ravi said: "What do we get out of this? What do we get out of this murder?"

He was accompanied by the distraught family of Shanmugam Murugesu, the Singapore drug trafficker who was hanged last May and who had become a friend of Nguyen.

Mr Shanmugam's mother, Letchumi, wailed: "Who is going to help me?"

Earlier, in a cafe nearby, other Singaporean opponents of the death penalty also held a protest vigil.

The newly-formed Singapore Anti-Death Penalty Committee said in a statement they "utterly deplore and condemn" the hanging of Nguyen, as an "inhumane and barbaric punishment disproportionate to his crime".

Members of the group, including artists and professionals, gathered at a 24-hour sidewalk cafe near Changi Prison, lighting a candle atop an outdoor table on which pictures of Nguyen and messages of sympathy were displayed.

Candles were also left at the gates of the prison, where foreign and local journalists camped out next to a television transmission dish.

The vigil was held after Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said there would be no pardon for Nguyen, caught three years ago at Changi Airport carrying nearly 400 grams of heroin while in transit from Cambodia to Australia.

Candelight and prayer vigils were also held in major Australian cities to mark Nguyen's death and to protest against the death penalty.

In Melbourne, the bells of St Ignatius Catholic Church, Richmond - where Nguyen went to school as a child - rang 25 times to mark every year of his life.

Hundreds of supporters gathered at the church, including former Iraqi hostage Douglas Wood, who twice entered the church before driving away.

Also in Melbourne, more than a hundred lawyers gathered on the steps of Melbourne's County Court to observe a minute's silence.

Supporters of Nguyen gathered outside Singapore High Commission in Canberra, carrying banners reading "Singapore, how could you?", "Thou shalt not kill", and "The bell tolls and we are all diminished".

In Sydney, a vigil was under way in Sydney's Martin Place.

Nguyen's body will be returned to Melbourne at the weekend ahead of his funeral, expected next week.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: deathpenalty; drugs; drugtrafficking; execution; hanging; nguyen; singapore

1 posted on 12/01/2005 3:22:48 PM PST by Buford T. Justice
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To: Buford T. Justice

These drug dealers know the penalty and do it anyway. Hang'em all.


2 posted on 12/01/2005 3:27:41 PM PST by DougSc
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To: Buford T. Justice

He took the risk and got caught.


3 posted on 12/01/2005 3:28:27 PM PST by SIDENET ("IT'S A COOKBOOK!!!")
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To: Buford T. Justice

They don't do vigils very often for people's whose lives are ruined by heroin, the substance this fellow was trying to distribute


4 posted on 12/01/2005 3:28:30 PM PST by Mount Athos
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To: Buford T. Justice
I'd like to dedicate a song.


5 posted on 12/01/2005 3:31:43 PM PST by SIDENET ("IT'S A COOKBOOK!!!")
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To: Buford T. Justice
Reminds me of that old commercial,

"When your busted for drugs over there,you're in for the hassle of your life"

6 posted on 12/01/2005 3:39:05 PM PST by mdittmar (May God watch over those who serve,and have served, to keep us free.)
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To: Mount Athos

14 oz's. A really bad risk/reward ratio.


7 posted on 12/01/2005 3:49:48 PM PST by jwh_Denver (Merry Christmas Christmas Christmas Christmas!)
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To: mdittmar
Reminds me of that old commercial,

"When your busted for drugs over there,you're in for the hassle of your life"

I remember that.

8 posted on 12/01/2005 4:21:37 PM PST by CAWats (People that are easily angered are easily frightened)
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To: Buford T. Justice
VAN Tuong Nguyen

Australian? Sounds Vietnamese to me.

9 posted on 12/01/2005 4:25:26 PM PST by Cowboy Bob (Liberalism cannot survive in a free and open society.)
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To: Buford T. Justice

Hanging is the legally prescribed penalty for smuggling drugs in Singapore. I am sure that Ong Tuong understood this. His act was a calculated risk deemed worth it because of the potential profit. He rolled the dice himself and he lost.


10 posted on 12/06/2005 9:36:33 PM PST by ThanhPhero (di hanh huong den La Vang)
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