TNAG-0599-FCO40-747-Capital-punishment-in-Dependent-Territories-1977 — Page 86

FCO40 Hong Kong Department Records 聯邦事務部香港部檔案 All

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The Lund Gurmwy

Mir HAUPTRECEIVED IN J Jasha

PS REGISTRY No. 3176

- 8 JUN 1977

HKC 38.571

HỒNG KONG

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MATH SENTENCES: LETTER FROM THE RT HON GEOFFREY RIPPON MP

1. Mr Geoffrey Rippon QC MP (Conservative Hexham) wrote to Mr Tomlinson on 17 May enclosing a letter from a constituent about the death sentences passed in Hong Kong on two British soldiers, Gunner Puttock and Trooper Bassett. Mr Tomlinson's Office has marked Mr Rippon's letter for answer by the Secretary of State.

2. Gunner Puttock and Trooper Bassett were convicted of murdering Ng Fai, a Chinese civilian, in Hong Kong after an all night drinking session early in 1976. The two men were convicted and sentenced to death on 30 July last year. Their appeals against conviction were dismissed by the Hong Kong Court of Appeal on 10 February this year. Both men submitted petitions for clemency to the Governor earlier this month. The Governor, with his Executive Council, is expected to decide before the end of June whether the two men should be reprieved. (Hong Kong telegram no. 525.)

3. No death sentence has been carried out in Hong Kong since 1966 but public opinion in the Colony remains overwhelmingly in favour of capital punishment and the Governor announced in late 1975 that whenever he commuted a death sentence he would

impose life imprisonment, unless exceptional circumstances

justified a lesser punishment. The Governor has continued to commute death sentences, with the reluctant acquiescence of hig Executive Council.

4. Mr Rippon's constituent suggests that there is a parallel between the present situation in Hong Kong with regard to the death penalty and that which he asserts existed in Egypt some thirty years ago. There is no point in commenting on this

Whatever the attitude taken by the British authorities in Egypt at the time with regard to the case,

alleged parallel.

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