Audio By Carbonatix
Malaysia's parliament has voted to remove the country's mandatory death penalty, potentially sparing more than 1,300 prisoners on death row.
The country has had a moratorium on executions since 2018.
But lawmakers on Monday overwhelmingly voted to remove the death penalty as the mandatory sentence for 11 serious crimes, including murder and terrorism.
Judges will retain discretion to impose capital punishment in exceptional cases.
But for the most serious crimes, the courts will now hand down life imprisonment sentences of up to 40 years, or corporal punishment such as caning, lawmakers said.
The reforms still need to clear the country's upper house but are widely expected to pass.
Speaking in parliament on Monday, Malaysia's deputy law minister said capital punishment was irreversible and had not worked as a deterrent to crime.
"The death penalty has not brought the results it was intended to bring," said Ramkarpal Singh.
There are 34 criminal offences punishable by death in Malaysia - 11 of which before Monday carried the mandatory death penalty.
The new laws once enacted will apply retrospectively, allowing those on death row 90 days to seek a review of their sentences.

There are currently 1,341 such prisoners in the country, more than 60% of whom had received a mandatory sentence according to an Amnesty International assessment.
The legislative process of overturning the country's death penalty began last June, when the former government under Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob announced it would abolish the death penalty as a mandatory punishment.
However Malaysia has been debating abolishing capital punishment for over a decade now. The two critical bills to reform the laws were introduced into parliament last week following a year of political debate.
Rights groups have hailed the reform as a major step forward for Malaysia and the wider South East Asia region, with Human Rights Watch saying it hoped it might influence neighbouring countries.
Last year, neighbouring city-state Singapore executed 11 people for drug trafficking offences.
The military government in Myanmar also handed down its first death sentences in decades, executing four pro-democracy activists.
According to official data, some 1,318 prisoners were hanged between 1992 and 2023 in Malaysia.
Latest Stories
-
MTN FA Cup: Defending champions Kotoko knocked out by AduanaÂ
52 minutes -
S Korean crypto firm accidentally pays out $40bn in bitcoin
1 hour -
Washington Post chief executive steps down after mass lay-offs
1 hour -
Iranian Nobel laureate handed further prison sentence, lawyer says
2 hours -
U20 WWCQ: South Africa come from behind to draw against Black Princesses in Accra
2 hours -
Why Prince William’s Saudi Arabia visit is a diplomatic maze
2 hours -
France murder trial complicated by twin brothers with same DNA
2 hours -
PM’s chief aide McSweeney quits over Mandelson row
2 hours -
Ayawaso East primary: OSP has no mandate to probe alleged vote buying – Haruna Mohammed
3 hours -
Recall of Baba Jamal as Nigeria High Commissioner ‘unnecessary populism’ – Haruna Mohammed
3 hours -
Presidency, NDC bigwigs unhappy over Baba Jamal’s victory in Ayawaso East – Haruna Mohammed
3 hours -
Africa Editors Congress 2026 set for Nairobi with focus on media sustainability and trust
3 hours -
We are tired of waiting- Cocoa farmers protest payment delays
4 hours -
Share of microfinance sector to overall banking sector declined to 8.0% – BoG
4 hours -
Ukraine, global conflict, and emerging security uuestions in the Sahel
5 hours
