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Singapore’s Supreme Court complex, which also houses the city state’s High Court. Photo: AFP

Singapore jails Myanmar maid for life over murder of employer’s 70-year-old mother-in-law she stabbed 26 times

  • Zin Mar Nwe stabbed her employer’s elderly mother-in-law for threatening to send the Myanmar national back to her employment agency, a court heard
  • Zin was thought to be 23-years-old at the time of the incident in 2018 but investigations later revealed that she was 17, sparing her the gallows
Singapore
A domestic worker in Singapore who stabbed her employer’s 70-year-old mother-in-law to death was sentenced to life imprisonment by the High Court on Tuesday.

Zin Mar Nwe, who was 17 at the time of the incident, stabbed the elderly woman 26 times after she threatened to send Zin back to her employment agent.

The Myanmar national had previously disputed the single charge of murder laid against her in November 2021.

However, she was convicted in May after High Court Judge Andre Maniam rejected the defence’s arguments that Zin had not been conscious of the stabbing and was in a dissociative state of mind.

Because there is reason to believe you were below 18 at the time of offence, I sentence you to life imprisonment
High Court Judge Andre Maniam

Zin started working for the victim’s son-in-law on May 10, 2018. She stayed with her employer, his wife and their two teenage daughters.

The court heard during the trial that she would wake up at about 5.30am and go to bed around 11pm.

The victim, who intended to stay in Singapore for a month, arrived from India about two weeks after Zin started working for the family. The victim and her family members cannot be named due to a court order.

On the day of the killing, the domestic worker was alone with the employer’s mother after the rest of the family left home at 11.30am.

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Between then and about 12.15pm, Zin Mar Nwe claimed that the victim became upset with her and told her loudly: “Tomorrow, you go agent.”

Angered by this, Zin grabbed a knife and stabbed the victim 26 times.

She then left the flat and went to her employment agency to request her passport but left when she realised that staff members at the agency were going to call her employers.

After taking public transport to various places, she eventually returned to the agency in a taxi at about 5.30pm, where staff members alerted the police and she was arrested.

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Deputy Public Prosecutor Sean Teh said that the prosecution was not objecting to life imprisonment instead of a death penalty as there was reason to believe Zin was under the age of 18 at the time of offence.

Under the Criminal Procedure Code, offenders who were under 18 at the time of the offence cannot be sentenced to death.

She was thought to be 23-years-old at the time of the incident in 2018 but investigations later revealed that she was 17.

Teh added that she was under 18 when she worked for her previous employers between January and May 2018, a month before the incident.

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“Further, while her passport indicated her age to be 23 at the time of the offence, a bone-age test conducted at Tan Tock Seng Hospital seven days after the incident states that Zin’s bone age was most likely 17,” Teh said.

Maniam, the High Court judge, agreed with the prosecution’s point.

“Having convicted you of murder and because there is reason to believe you were below 18 at the time of offence, I sentence you to life imprisonment,” he said.

Anyone convicted of murder in Singapore can be sentenced to death or life imprisonment.

This article was first published by Today Online
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