South African woman executed in China

GlobalPost

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — China has executed a South African woman for drug smuggling, ignoring an appeal for clemency by President Jacob Zuma.

Janice Bronwyn Linden, 38, from KwaZulu-Natal, was executed by lethal injection Monday, more than three years after being arrested for drug smuggling.

Linden was found guilty of possessing 3 kg of crystal methamphetamine upon arrival at Guangzhou airport. She said the drugs had been planted in her suitcase, but the Guangdong High Court and the Supreme Court in Beijing rejected her appeals.

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According to South African media reports, Linden was only told of her execution a few hours before she died, which is the usual practice of the Chinese government.

The TV channel eNews said two of Linden's sisters were allowed to spend an hour with her before she was executed.

South Africa's government, which has a close trade and political relationship with Beijing, said the execution of Linden would not affect diplomatic ties.

Clayson Monyela, spokesman for South Africa's Department of International Relations and Cooperation, told the BBC that President Zuma had intervened in Linden's case.

"All the necessary interventions were done at every possible level, even the highest ones," Monyela said.

According to Durban's Mercury newspaper, international relations minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane had appealed to the Chinese delegation attending the UN climate change summit.

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But a spokesman for South Africa's opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) party, which had called on Zuma to make the appeal, said the government had not done enough.

"A commitment to human rights is a guiding principle of South Africa's international relations," Stevens Mokgalapa told South Africa's Times newspaper.

"There has been little evidence of this commitment in our dealings with China of late."

China executes thousands of people every year by lethal injection and firing squad, more than any other country, according to Amnesty International. The exact number of executions is not known.

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