Intellasia.net
 Services  Tenders BizFind Jobs Archive Search Contact  Tiếng Việt
 
 
Intellasia News Online
Updated: Dec 31, 2008 - 1:41:27 PM (GMT+7:00)
RSS feed to Intellasia Vietnam News RSS Feed Video News Feeds
Free e-mail newsletter
Email this article Send to a friend     Printer friendly page Printer friendly
 « back
 
 
  Stocks & Securities
 
  Business
 
  Finance
 
  Economy
 
  Property
 
  Resources
 
  Infrastructure
 
  Info-tech
 
  Agriculture
 
  Governance
 
  Legal News
 
  Society
  Health
 
  Regional
 
  Tenders
 
 
 
 
Australian TV man jailed 10 months in Singapore for drugs
04-DEC-2008 Intellasia | AFP
Dec 4, 2008 - 7:00:00 AM
An Australian television correspondent who said he was traumatised from covering wars and natural disasters was jailed 10 months by a Singapore court on Tuesday for drug offences.
Australian television correspondent Peter Lloyd , seen here, was jailed 10 months by a Singapore court on Tuesday for drug offences (AFP/Roslan Rahman)
Peter Lloyd, 42, New Delhi-based correspondent for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, pleaded guilty to all three charges.

Judge Hamidah Ibrahim sentenced Lloyd to eight months for possessing the stimulant methamphetamine and another eight months for consuming it. The sentences are to run concurrently.

He was charged with possessing 0.41 grams (0.014 ounces) of the stimulant, also known as "ice".

Lloyd received an additional two months in jail for possessing drug paraphernalia stained with ketamine, an anaesthetic which is commonly used at dance parties.

Lloyd, wearing a dark suit and white open-necked shirt, smiled when he arrived for the hearing. After the verdict he was led away, expressionless and in handcuffs, to start his sentence.

His ex-wife, Kirsty McIvor, broke down in tears and was consoled by a friend.

Lloyd, who was arrested while on holiday here on July 16, had earlier expressed remorse, according to his lawyer Hamidul Haq.

Haq argued that Lloyd was suffering from post-traumatic stress because of his work as a journalist covering wars and disasters in Asia, including the 2002 Bali bombing.

Lloyd "is not a drug abuser as such" but took methamphetamine as a way of dealing with nightmares caused by the tragedies he had covered, Haq said.

"In trying to deal with this... ice became a form of self-medication for him. He does not do it for recreational purpose," the lawyer said.

The judge responded by calling the charges "very serious."

Singapore's attorney general last month withdrew a charge of trafficking 0.15 grams of methamphetamine against Lloyd. The offence carried a prison term of between five and 20 years behind bars and five to 15 strokes of the cane.

Singaporean sales executive Sani Saidi, 31, was sentenced in August to 10 months' jail after pleading guilty to possessing 0.15 grams of methamphetamine which he admitted having bought from Lloyd.

Journalists from Lloyd's ABC network were at court Tuesday to cover his case.


       
     

    © Copyright 2007 by Intellasia.net

    Top of Page

 

 

Intellasia News Services
© 2007 All Rights Reserved
privacy policy : terms of use : contact