I am definitely for the death Penalty. I am just not in favour of the way it has been applied. There have been too many mistakes, too many injustices. You have to be 100% sure, no questions, no balance of probabilities, no uncertainties!
Whether it should be applied for drugs related cases is another matter, I personally don't think so. Indonesia obviously thinks it's required and as others have said, if you go to a country with the Death Penalty for certain crimes...don't commit those crimes...or don't be surprised and all 'remorseful' if you do and get caught....clear and simple! People opposed to this particular sentence have said..."but they have been reformed"! Oh really? massive opportunities to smuggle drugs in an Indonesian prison and they have 'turned their backs' on those opportunities? I don't think so! It's probably quite easy to say "I will honestly never ever, ever, smuggle drugs again" when you are looking at a death sentence imposed on you!
The death sentence will never deter crimes...it will deter repeat offences of crimes when offenders found guilty have been released on Parole. When the death Penalty was in force in the UK there were something like 70 murderers who had been reprieved (and that doesn't mean commuted to a 'whole life' life sentence but on average back then it was 10 years served and then released) who then went on to murder again. How many murderers have murdered again since the death penalty was abolished? I don't know, but if it was only one murder it would have been avoided had the murderer been executed.
I don't care how the sentence is carried out either. When a young child is abducted, raped, horrifically tortured and then murdered, where their last few hours (or even days) of life are full of horrendous pain and paralysing fear, then I couldn't give a monkeys toss if a lethal injection isn't all nice and peaceful for the filth who committed that crime.
If we in Europe had a prison system and sentencing system similar to that that the US has then I would be more than happy that we don't have the death penalty. If a death sentence were replaced with a whole life tariff, or sentences of 100 years for example, and those found guilty put in a supermax prison with very strict rules and very few comforts,then that would be acceptable punishment. But a whole life tariff is rarely sentenced in the UK and other countries, like Norway, have a 'maximum' life sentence of just a couple of decades.
But the main thing is there must be, in either case, absolutely no doubt, no extenuating circumstances, whatsoever! otherwise you cannot have a death sentence or a whole life tariff.