-
Van Tuong Nguyen: The Drug Trafficker Who Was Denied A Final Hug
On 12 Dec 2002, Van Tuong Nguyen was arrested at Changi Airport on charges of Drug Trafficking; what subsequently unfolded was one of the most heartbreaking crime stories reported to date.
Follow @MustShareNewsSG for more videos like this.
published: 15 Jan 2022
-
Mother visits Australian, lawyer comments
(30 Nov 2005)
1. Wide of Changi Prison Link Centre, building where relatives may meet inmates
2. Wide of workers on steps outside
3. Mid shot of Sign reading "Prison Link Centre"
4. Wide of Kim Nguyen, mother of Nguyen Tuong Van, leaving visitor's building (head covered with scarf)
5. Mid of Kim Nguyen entering car to leave
6. Mid of car leaving prison, zoom in on Kim Nguyen in rear seat
7. Mid of Lex Lasry, Nguyen's lawyer, walking to press, zoom in
8. Press cutaway
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Lex Lasry, lawyer acting on behalf of Nguyen:
"He wants to die a good death, he believes he has lived a good life in the last couple of years and he has dealt with what he is facing. He is ready to face it."
10. Press cutaway
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Lex Lasry, lawyer acting on behalf of N...
published: 21 Jul 2015
-
Van Tuong Nguyen
Van Tuong Nguyen baptised Caleb, was an Australian from Melbourne, Victoria convicted of drug trafficking in Singapore. A Vietnamese Australian, he was also addressed as Nguyen Tuong Van in the Singaporean media, his name in Vietnamese custom.
Drug trafficking carries a mandatory death sentence under Singapore's Misuse of Drugs Act, and despite pleas for clemency from the Australian government, Amnesty International, the Holy See, as well as other individuals and groups, he was executed by hanging at 6:07 am SST on 2 December 2005 at Changi Prison.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
published: 04 Jan 2016
-
RUSHES Body of executed Australian, coffin transported
(2 Dec 2005) SHOTLIST
1. Nguyen Tuong Van's coffin being carried in funeral parlour, make up artist, undertakers working
2. Undertakers closing coffin
3. Various of funeral service
4. Australian Consul-General Ross Tysoe and a member of his staff arriving at funeral home, media
5. Tysoe and colleague next to the coffin
6. Various of Australian delegation outside
7. Undertakers carrying cofffin out, loading it into van
8. Various of coffin inside the van
STORYLINE
Singapore on Friday executed Australian heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van in a case that triggered an outcry in his country.
After the execution, Nguyen's body was taken to a funeral parlor, where a rosary was placed in his hands.
Australia's Consul-General, Ross Tysoe, visited the funeral parlor and oversa...
published: 21 Jul 2015
-
New SBS Drama - Better Man
Premieres Thursday 25 July 8:30pm SBS ONE (part one)
Thursday 1 August 8:30pm SBS ONE (part two)
Better Man is the powerful story of a young man desperately trying to provide for his family, for which he paid the ultimate price. Starring Bryan Brown, David Wenham, Claudia Karvan and introducing Remy Hii.
This 2-part series looks at the remarkable life and death of Van Nguyen; a Vietnamese Australian man who was convicted of drug trafficking in Singapore and executed for his crime in 2005.
#BetterManSBS
published: 18 Jun 2013
-
6. EndPandemics Appeal to World Leaders w/ Nguyen Tuong Van
A Roundtable to Recommend Urgent and Practical Steps World Leaders Can Take to Prevent New Pandemics by Addressing their Root Causes
Nguyen Tuong Van, Secretary General, ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Assembly
Find out more at - EndPandemics.Earth
"A Global Alliance to Protect and Regenerate Nature"
published: 15 Feb 2022
-
Prison exterior, lawyer before and after execution
(2 Dec 2005)
++NIGHT SHOTS++
1. Various of exteriors of Changi prison
2. Twin brother of executed man, Nguyen Tuong Van, in taxi
3. Media surrounding taxi
4. Various of brother surrounded by friends and supporters walking into Changi prison
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julian McMahon, Lawyer:
"Kim (Nguyen's mother) was able to, at least for some time, I am not sure for how long, was able to touch Van on the face. And she said to me she was talking to him and able to touch his hair and his face and that was a great comfort to her."
6. Two of Ngyuen's friends talking
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julian McMahon, Lawyer:
"And then the body or Van's body will be taken and prepared for burial in Australia."
8. Various of supporters at a candlelight vigil outside prison
9. Human rights ...
published: 21 Jul 2015
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Mother and lawyer pay final visit to condemned Australian
(1 Dec 2005)
1. Various exteriors of Prison Link Centre (Changi) - visiting centre of prison where Nguyen Tuong Van is held
2. Nguyen's mother is helped out of car and guided through door of prison, followed by two other men
3. Mid shot pull to wide of Nguyen's Australian lawyers, Julian McMahon and Lex Lasry, walking to talk to press after last visit to Nguyen
4. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julian McMahon, lawyer for Nguyen Tuong Van
"What I wish to say is he is cheerful because he's composed. He only wishes to think good thoughts, to say good thoughts, do what is right. He is completely rehabilitated, completely reformed, completely focused on doing what is good, and now they are going to kill him. Thank you."
5. Various of lawyers getting into minivan
6. Minivan drives away
7. P...
published: 21 Jul 2015
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Singaporean PM says execution will go ahead
(1 Dec 2005)
1. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong walk to lecterns
2. Cutaway of photographer
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore Prime Minister:
"This is not a matter discussed between the chancellor and me. Its a Singapore issue. We have stated our position clearly. We take a very serious view of drug trafficking - the penalty is death. In this case it was an enormous amount of drugs being trafficked. Its nearly 400 grammes of pure heroin, which is equivalent to 26,000 doses of heroin if you do it shot by shot. Which means untold misery and suffering to hundreds if not thousands of addicts and their families. The man was charged, convicted, appealed, dismissed. He put up a clemency petition. The clemency petition was consi...
published: 21 Jul 2015
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Family of Australian on death row arrives in Singapore
(21 Nov 2005) SHOTLIST
1. Various of arrivals board at Changi airport
2. Various of Van Nguyen's mother Kim Nguyen and twin brother Khoa Nguyen walking through airport, surrounded by media
3. Van Nguyen's mother Kim Nguyen and twin brother Khoa Nguyen get in a car with Australian High Commission officials and drive away
STORYLINE
Australia is considering taking Singapore to the International Court of Justice in a bid to prevent the execution of heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van, an Australian citizen, next Friday (Dec 2), Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said on Monday.
Nguyen's mother, Kim Nguyen, and his twin brother Khoa Nguyen arrived at Changi airport in Singapore late on Monday from Melbourne to visit the condemned man.
It was the same airport where Ngu...
published: 21 Jul 2015
5:03
Van Tuong Nguyen: The Drug Trafficker Who Was Denied A Final Hug
On 12 Dec 2002, Van Tuong Nguyen was arrested at Changi Airport on charges of Drug Trafficking; what subsequently unfolded was one of the most heartbreaking cri...
On 12 Dec 2002, Van Tuong Nguyen was arrested at Changi Airport on charges of Drug Trafficking; what subsequently unfolded was one of the most heartbreaking crime stories reported to date.
Follow @MustShareNewsSG for more videos like this.
https://wn.com/Van_Tuong_Nguyen_The_Drug_Trafficker_Who_Was_Denied_A_Final_Hug
On 12 Dec 2002, Van Tuong Nguyen was arrested at Changi Airport on charges of Drug Trafficking; what subsequently unfolded was one of the most heartbreaking crime stories reported to date.
Follow @MustShareNewsSG for more videos like this.
- published: 15 Jan 2022
- views: 9689
2:30
Mother visits Australian, lawyer comments
(30 Nov 2005)
1. Wide of Changi Prison Link Centre, building where relatives may meet inmates
2. Wide of workers on steps outside
3. Mid shot of Sign read...
(30 Nov 2005)
1. Wide of Changi Prison Link Centre, building where relatives may meet inmates
2. Wide of workers on steps outside
3. Mid shot of Sign reading "Prison Link Centre"
4. Wide of Kim Nguyen, mother of Nguyen Tuong Van, leaving visitor's building (head covered with scarf)
5. Mid of Kim Nguyen entering car to leave
6. Mid of car leaving prison, zoom in on Kim Nguyen in rear seat
7. Mid of Lex Lasry, Nguyen's lawyer, walking to press, zoom in
8. Press cutaway
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Lex Lasry, lawyer acting on behalf of Nguyen:
"He wants to die a good death, he believes he has lived a good life in the last couple of years and he has dealt with what he is facing. He is ready to face it."
10. Press cutaway
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Lex Lasry, lawyer acting on behalf of Nguyen:
"Indeed the criticism will continue because despite the courage of our client this country can't go on executing people without giving them the opportunity to say why they shouldn't be executed. He sees the unfairness to that and we will endeavour to continue the argument and if possible we would do it on behalf of others here. This law simply has to change."
12. Wide of Lasry speaking to press
13. Lasry's car leaving
14. Wide of Nguyen's friends arriving at prison, Kelly Ng (wearing glasses) gets out of car, followed by Bronwyn Lew
15. Wide of security at prison
16. Wide of security official at gate
17. Mid of official
STORYLINE:
Nguyen Tuong Van, an Australian due to be executed in Singapore on Friday for heroin trafficking, has accepted he will be hanged despite appeals by Canberra and his supporters, his lawyer said on Wednesday.
"He's ready to die," Lex Lasry said. "He wants to die a good death and he believes he's lived a good life."
Vietnam-born Nguyen received a mandatory death sentence after being caught with 396 grams (14 ounces) of heroin at Singapore's Changi Airport in 2002 en route from Cambodia to Australia.
Australia, which abolished the death penalty in 1973, has said Nguyen deserves to live because he is young, has shown remorse and has no prior convictions.
But Singapore hasn't backed down despite numerous Australian appeals to spare his life, insisting that it must treat foreigners and citizens equally under the law and that drug trafficking is a serious offence that can lead to abusers deaths.
Nguyen mother Kim and twin brother Khoa have been visiting him in Singapore's Changi Prison over the past 10 days. Since Tuesday, the hour long visits have been extended to several hours daily, under prison policy for death row inmates.
Nguyen is separated from all visitors by a pane of glass, but Australia has appealed to Singapore to allow Kim and Khoa to embrace the man one last time before the execution.
Nguyen has said he was trafficking heroin to help pay off his twin brother's debts.
Lasry said Nguyen has accepted the likelihood of his execution despite Australia's appeals, and that his mother was coming to terms with the prospect of her son's death.
His lawyer also said he would continue to urge Singapore to renounce its mandatory death penalty in some drug cases, even if Nguyen's execution is carried out.
"The criticism will continue," Lasry said. "This country can't go on executing people without giving them the opportunity to say why they shouldn't be executed."
Singapore has said that Nguyen received a fair trial, and that his clemency process was carefully considered.
Leaders in the Southeast Asian city-state say its use of the death penalty has been an effective deterrent that has kept its crime rates low.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
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https://wn.com/Mother_Visits_Australian,_Lawyer_Comments
(30 Nov 2005)
1. Wide of Changi Prison Link Centre, building where relatives may meet inmates
2. Wide of workers on steps outside
3. Mid shot of Sign reading "Prison Link Centre"
4. Wide of Kim Nguyen, mother of Nguyen Tuong Van, leaving visitor's building (head covered with scarf)
5. Mid of Kim Nguyen entering car to leave
6. Mid of car leaving prison, zoom in on Kim Nguyen in rear seat
7. Mid of Lex Lasry, Nguyen's lawyer, walking to press, zoom in
8. Press cutaway
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Lex Lasry, lawyer acting on behalf of Nguyen:
"He wants to die a good death, he believes he has lived a good life in the last couple of years and he has dealt with what he is facing. He is ready to face it."
10. Press cutaway
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Lex Lasry, lawyer acting on behalf of Nguyen:
"Indeed the criticism will continue because despite the courage of our client this country can't go on executing people without giving them the opportunity to say why they shouldn't be executed. He sees the unfairness to that and we will endeavour to continue the argument and if possible we would do it on behalf of others here. This law simply has to change."
12. Wide of Lasry speaking to press
13. Lasry's car leaving
14. Wide of Nguyen's friends arriving at prison, Kelly Ng (wearing glasses) gets out of car, followed by Bronwyn Lew
15. Wide of security at prison
16. Wide of security official at gate
17. Mid of official
STORYLINE:
Nguyen Tuong Van, an Australian due to be executed in Singapore on Friday for heroin trafficking, has accepted he will be hanged despite appeals by Canberra and his supporters, his lawyer said on Wednesday.
"He's ready to die," Lex Lasry said. "He wants to die a good death and he believes he's lived a good life."
Vietnam-born Nguyen received a mandatory death sentence after being caught with 396 grams (14 ounces) of heroin at Singapore's Changi Airport in 2002 en route from Cambodia to Australia.
Australia, which abolished the death penalty in 1973, has said Nguyen deserves to live because he is young, has shown remorse and has no prior convictions.
But Singapore hasn't backed down despite numerous Australian appeals to spare his life, insisting that it must treat foreigners and citizens equally under the law and that drug trafficking is a serious offence that can lead to abusers deaths.
Nguyen mother Kim and twin brother Khoa have been visiting him in Singapore's Changi Prison over the past 10 days. Since Tuesday, the hour long visits have been extended to several hours daily, under prison policy for death row inmates.
Nguyen is separated from all visitors by a pane of glass, but Australia has appealed to Singapore to allow Kim and Khoa to embrace the man one last time before the execution.
Nguyen has said he was trafficking heroin to help pay off his twin brother's debts.
Lasry said Nguyen has accepted the likelihood of his execution despite Australia's appeals, and that his mother was coming to terms with the prospect of her son's death.
His lawyer also said he would continue to urge Singapore to renounce its mandatory death penalty in some drug cases, even if Nguyen's execution is carried out.
"The criticism will continue," Lasry said. "This country can't go on executing people without giving them the opportunity to say why they shouldn't be executed."
Singapore has said that Nguyen received a fair trial, and that his clemency process was carefully considered.
Leaders in the Southeast Asian city-state say its use of the death penalty has been an effective deterrent that has kept its crime rates low.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
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Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/APNews/
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/a2bd15b75ee7fe627e3223e977794564
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 1492
15:05
Van Tuong Nguyen
Van Tuong Nguyen baptised Caleb, was an Australian from Melbourne, Victoria convicted of drug trafficking in Singapore. A Vietnamese Australian, he was also add...
Van Tuong Nguyen baptised Caleb, was an Australian from Melbourne, Victoria convicted of drug trafficking in Singapore. A Vietnamese Australian, he was also addressed as Nguyen Tuong Van in the Singaporean media, his name in Vietnamese custom.
Drug trafficking carries a mandatory death sentence under Singapore's Misuse of Drugs Act, and despite pleas for clemency from the Australian government, Amnesty International, the Holy See, as well as other individuals and groups, he was executed by hanging at 6:07 am SST on 2 December 2005 at Changi Prison.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
https://wn.com/Van_Tuong_Nguyen
Van Tuong Nguyen baptised Caleb, was an Australian from Melbourne, Victoria convicted of drug trafficking in Singapore. A Vietnamese Australian, he was also addressed as Nguyen Tuong Van in the Singaporean media, his name in Vietnamese custom.
Drug trafficking carries a mandatory death sentence under Singapore's Misuse of Drugs Act, and despite pleas for clemency from the Australian government, Amnesty International, the Holy See, as well as other individuals and groups, he was executed by hanging at 6:07 am SST on 2 December 2005 at Changi Prison.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
- published: 04 Jan 2016
- views: 7930
6:05
RUSHES Body of executed Australian, coffin transported
(2 Dec 2005) SHOTLIST
1. Nguyen Tuong Van's coffin being carried in funeral parlour, make up artist, undertakers working
2. Undertakers closing coffin
3. V...
(2 Dec 2005) SHOTLIST
1. Nguyen Tuong Van's coffin being carried in funeral parlour, make up artist, undertakers working
2. Undertakers closing coffin
3. Various of funeral service
4. Australian Consul-General Ross Tysoe and a member of his staff arriving at funeral home, media
5. Tysoe and colleague next to the coffin
6. Various of Australian delegation outside
7. Undertakers carrying cofffin out, loading it into van
8. Various of coffin inside the van
STORYLINE
Singapore on Friday executed Australian heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van in a case that triggered an outcry in his country.
After the execution, Nguyen's body was taken to a funeral parlor, where a rosary was placed in his hands.
Australia's Consul-General, Ross Tysoe, visited the funeral parlor and oversaw the body being taken to a chapel on the grounds of a Roman Catholic convent where a private mass was held for Nguyen.
The Nguyen family, their friends and lawyer were to leave Singapore with the body late on Saturday for Melbourne, where Nguyen would be buried.
The execution was carried out early on Friday at Changi Prison after Nguyen failed in his appeals to the Court of Appeal and to President S.R. Nathan for clemency.
Vietnam-born Nguyen, 25, was hanged despite numerous appeals from Australian leaders for his life to be spared.
He had received a mandatory death sentence after being caught with 396 grammes (14 ounces) of heroin at the city-state's Changi Airport in 2002, en route from Cambodia to Australia.
Singapore says its tough laws and penalties for drug trafficking are an effective deterrent against a crime that ruins lives and that foreigners and
Singaporeans must be treated alike.
It said Nguyen's appeals for clemency were carefully considered.
Nguyen was caught with more than 26 times the 15 grammes (0.53 ounces) of heroin that draws a mandatory death penalty.
The Home Affairs Ministry statement said the amount was enough to supply 26-thousand doses of heroin and had a street value of one point three (M) million Singapore dollars (768,500 US dollars).
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
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You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/da3b14dfda968e9d16ebc4dafff4624b
https://wn.com/Rushes_Body_Of_Executed_Australian,_Coffin_Transported
(2 Dec 2005) SHOTLIST
1. Nguyen Tuong Van's coffin being carried in funeral parlour, make up artist, undertakers working
2. Undertakers closing coffin
3. Various of funeral service
4. Australian Consul-General Ross Tysoe and a member of his staff arriving at funeral home, media
5. Tysoe and colleague next to the coffin
6. Various of Australian delegation outside
7. Undertakers carrying cofffin out, loading it into van
8. Various of coffin inside the van
STORYLINE
Singapore on Friday executed Australian heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van in a case that triggered an outcry in his country.
After the execution, Nguyen's body was taken to a funeral parlor, where a rosary was placed in his hands.
Australia's Consul-General, Ross Tysoe, visited the funeral parlor and oversaw the body being taken to a chapel on the grounds of a Roman Catholic convent where a private mass was held for Nguyen.
The Nguyen family, their friends and lawyer were to leave Singapore with the body late on Saturday for Melbourne, where Nguyen would be buried.
The execution was carried out early on Friday at Changi Prison after Nguyen failed in his appeals to the Court of Appeal and to President S.R. Nathan for clemency.
Vietnam-born Nguyen, 25, was hanged despite numerous appeals from Australian leaders for his life to be spared.
He had received a mandatory death sentence after being caught with 396 grammes (14 ounces) of heroin at the city-state's Changi Airport in 2002, en route from Cambodia to Australia.
Singapore says its tough laws and penalties for drug trafficking are an effective deterrent against a crime that ruins lives and that foreigners and
Singaporeans must be treated alike.
It said Nguyen's appeals for clemency were carefully considered.
Nguyen was caught with more than 26 times the 15 grammes (0.53 ounces) of heroin that draws a mandatory death penalty.
The Home Affairs Ministry statement said the amount was enough to supply 26-thousand doses of heroin and had a street value of one point three (M) million Singapore dollars (768,500 US dollars).
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_Archive
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/APArchives
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/APNews/
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/da3b14dfda968e9d16ebc4dafff4624b
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 473696
1:00
New SBS Drama - Better Man
Premieres Thursday 25 July 8:30pm SBS ONE (part one)
Thursday 1 August 8:30pm SBS ONE (part two)
Better Man is the powerful story of a young man desperately tr...
Premieres Thursday 25 July 8:30pm SBS ONE (part one)
Thursday 1 August 8:30pm SBS ONE (part two)
Better Man is the powerful story of a young man desperately trying to provide for his family, for which he paid the ultimate price. Starring Bryan Brown, David Wenham, Claudia Karvan and introducing Remy Hii.
This 2-part series looks at the remarkable life and death of Van Nguyen; a Vietnamese Australian man who was convicted of drug trafficking in Singapore and executed for his crime in 2005.
#BetterManSBS
https://wn.com/New_Sbs_Drama_Better_Man
Premieres Thursday 25 July 8:30pm SBS ONE (part one)
Thursday 1 August 8:30pm SBS ONE (part two)
Better Man is the powerful story of a young man desperately trying to provide for his family, for which he paid the ultimate price. Starring Bryan Brown, David Wenham, Claudia Karvan and introducing Remy Hii.
This 2-part series looks at the remarkable life and death of Van Nguyen; a Vietnamese Australian man who was convicted of drug trafficking in Singapore and executed for his crime in 2005.
#BetterManSBS
- published: 18 Jun 2013
- views: 26945
10:19
6. EndPandemics Appeal to World Leaders w/ Nguyen Tuong Van
A Roundtable to Recommend Urgent and Practical Steps World Leaders Can Take to Prevent New Pandemics by Addressing their Root Causes
Nguyen Tuong Van, Secretar...
A Roundtable to Recommend Urgent and Practical Steps World Leaders Can Take to Prevent New Pandemics by Addressing their Root Causes
Nguyen Tuong Van, Secretary General, ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Assembly
Find out more at - EndPandemics.Earth
"A Global Alliance to Protect and Regenerate Nature"
https://wn.com/6._Endpandemics_Appeal_To_World_Leaders_W_Nguyen_Tuong_Van
A Roundtable to Recommend Urgent and Practical Steps World Leaders Can Take to Prevent New Pandemics by Addressing their Root Causes
Nguyen Tuong Van, Secretary General, ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Assembly
Find out more at - EndPandemics.Earth
"A Global Alliance to Protect and Regenerate Nature"
- published: 15 Feb 2022
- views: 45
3:27
Prison exterior, lawyer before and after execution
(2 Dec 2005)
++NIGHT SHOTS++
1. Various of exteriors of Changi prison
2. Twin brother of executed man, Nguyen Tuong Van, in taxi
3. Media surrounding t...
(2 Dec 2005)
++NIGHT SHOTS++
1. Various of exteriors of Changi prison
2. Twin brother of executed man, Nguyen Tuong Van, in taxi
3. Media surrounding taxi
4. Various of brother surrounded by friends and supporters walking into Changi prison
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julian McMahon, Lawyer:
"Kim (Nguyen's mother) was able to, at least for some time, I am not sure for how long, was able to touch Van on the face. And she said to me she was talking to him and able to touch his hair and his face and that was a great comfort to her."
6. Two of Ngyuen's friends talking
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julian McMahon, Lawyer:
"And then the body or Van's body will be taken and prepared for burial in Australia."
8. Various of supporters at a candlelight vigil outside prison
9. Human rights lawyer, M. Ravi, carrying placard reading "Don't let this boy become an obituary." Ravi is accompanied by Letchumi Murugesu, right, mother of Shanmugam Murugesu, executed in May 2005 and her twin grandsons Gopalan and Krishnan Murugesu, sons of Shanmugam Murugesu
10. SOUNDBITE: (English) M Ravi, Human Rights Lawyer:
"The governments of Australia and Singapore and all the parties who aided and abetted this state murder, we pray to the holy lord, we can only ask the God to intervene and be witness to this secrecy, this secret hanging to take place."
++DAYLIGHT SHOTS++
11. Exterior of prison
12. Brother, friend and lawyer coming out of prison
13. Various of brother and friend coming out of prison, getting into car, driving away
STORYLINE:
Australian heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van was executed early on Friday in Singapore, the Singaporean government said.
In an e-mailed statement, the Home Affairs Ministry confirmed that the execution had been carried out at Changi Prison.
It said Nguyen had failed in his appeals to the Court of Appeal, and to President S.R. Nathan for clemency.
25-year-old Nguyen was hanged before dawn despite numerous appeals from Australia for his life to be spared.
He received a mandatory death sentence after being caught with 396 grammes (14 ounces) of heroin at the city-state's Changi Airport in 2002.
The case triggered a public outcry in Australia, where vigils were held in cities on Friday at the hour of his execution.
Nguyen was hanged at 6 a.m. Singapore time (2200 GMT).
Dressed in black, a dozen friends and supporters stood outside the maximum-security Changi Prison ahead of the hanging.
His twin brother, Nguyen Khoa, was dressed in white.
Candles and handwritten notes containing messages of support and calls for an end to Singapore's death penalty were placed outside the prison gates.
Physical contact between Nguyen and visitors had been barred in past days.
But one of his Australian lawyers, Julian McMahon, said Nguyen's mother, Kim, had been allowed to hold her son's hand and touch his face in her last visit on Thursday.
McMahon said after a death certificate was issued, Nguyen's body would be formally identified and flown back to Australia.
Singapore says its tough laws and penalties for drug trafficking are an effective deterrent against a crime that ruins lives, and that foreigners and Singaporeans must be treated alike.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_Archive
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/APArchives
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/APNews/
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/cb9ee8b7776e840e6ab8a29f3bb6f4af
https://wn.com/Prison_Exterior,_Lawyer_Before_And_After_Execution
(2 Dec 2005)
++NIGHT SHOTS++
1. Various of exteriors of Changi prison
2. Twin brother of executed man, Nguyen Tuong Van, in taxi
3. Media surrounding taxi
4. Various of brother surrounded by friends and supporters walking into Changi prison
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julian McMahon, Lawyer:
"Kim (Nguyen's mother) was able to, at least for some time, I am not sure for how long, was able to touch Van on the face. And she said to me she was talking to him and able to touch his hair and his face and that was a great comfort to her."
6. Two of Ngyuen's friends talking
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julian McMahon, Lawyer:
"And then the body or Van's body will be taken and prepared for burial in Australia."
8. Various of supporters at a candlelight vigil outside prison
9. Human rights lawyer, M. Ravi, carrying placard reading "Don't let this boy become an obituary." Ravi is accompanied by Letchumi Murugesu, right, mother of Shanmugam Murugesu, executed in May 2005 and her twin grandsons Gopalan and Krishnan Murugesu, sons of Shanmugam Murugesu
10. SOUNDBITE: (English) M Ravi, Human Rights Lawyer:
"The governments of Australia and Singapore and all the parties who aided and abetted this state murder, we pray to the holy lord, we can only ask the God to intervene and be witness to this secrecy, this secret hanging to take place."
++DAYLIGHT SHOTS++
11. Exterior of prison
12. Brother, friend and lawyer coming out of prison
13. Various of brother and friend coming out of prison, getting into car, driving away
STORYLINE:
Australian heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van was executed early on Friday in Singapore, the Singaporean government said.
In an e-mailed statement, the Home Affairs Ministry confirmed that the execution had been carried out at Changi Prison.
It said Nguyen had failed in his appeals to the Court of Appeal, and to President S.R. Nathan for clemency.
25-year-old Nguyen was hanged before dawn despite numerous appeals from Australia for his life to be spared.
He received a mandatory death sentence after being caught with 396 grammes (14 ounces) of heroin at the city-state's Changi Airport in 2002.
The case triggered a public outcry in Australia, where vigils were held in cities on Friday at the hour of his execution.
Nguyen was hanged at 6 a.m. Singapore time (2200 GMT).
Dressed in black, a dozen friends and supporters stood outside the maximum-security Changi Prison ahead of the hanging.
His twin brother, Nguyen Khoa, was dressed in white.
Candles and handwritten notes containing messages of support and calls for an end to Singapore's death penalty were placed outside the prison gates.
Physical contact between Nguyen and visitors had been barred in past days.
But one of his Australian lawyers, Julian McMahon, said Nguyen's mother, Kim, had been allowed to hold her son's hand and touch his face in her last visit on Thursday.
McMahon said after a death certificate was issued, Nguyen's body would be formally identified and flown back to Australia.
Singapore says its tough laws and penalties for drug trafficking are an effective deterrent against a crime that ruins lives, and that foreigners and Singaporeans must be treated alike.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 40435
2:27
Mother and lawyer pay final visit to condemned Australian
(1 Dec 2005)
1. Various exteriors of Prison Link Centre (Changi) - visiting centre of prison where Nguyen Tuong Van is held
2. Nguyen's mother is helped ou...
(1 Dec 2005)
1. Various exteriors of Prison Link Centre (Changi) - visiting centre of prison where Nguyen Tuong Van is held
2. Nguyen's mother is helped out of car and guided through door of prison, followed by two other men
3. Mid shot pull to wide of Nguyen's Australian lawyers, Julian McMahon and Lex Lasry, walking to talk to press after last visit to Nguyen
4. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julian McMahon, lawyer for Nguyen Tuong Van
"What I wish to say is he is cheerful because he's composed. He only wishes to think good thoughts, to say good thoughts, do what is right. He is completely rehabilitated, completely reformed, completely focused on doing what is good, and now they are going to kill him. Thank you."
5. Various of lawyers getting into minivan
6. Minivan drives away
7. Press gathered outside prison
8. Various exteriors of prison link centre, guards outside
STORYLINE:
The family of Australian heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van visited the condemned man for
the last time on Thursday, less than 24 hours before his scheduled execution following failed appeals.
Nguyen's mother Kim and twin brother, Nguyen Khoa, entered the jail early on Thursday afternoon.
A friend, Kelly Ng, also visited.
Later his lawyers visited Nguyen.
"He is completely rehabilitated, completely reformed, completely focused on doing what is good and now they are going to kill him," said Julian McMahon, one of Nguyen's Australian lawyers.
Another of Nguyen's lawyers, Lex Lasry, said their last visit was "beautiful" and "uplifting".
Nguyen is scheduled to hang on Friday before dawn at the maximum security Changi Prison where he is incarcerated.
Lasry has criticised Singapore's mandatory death penalty for some drugs cases and attacked the clemency appeal process as lacking transparency.
Singapore refused repeated pleas from Australian leaders for clemency for Nguyen, 25, who received a mandatory death sentence after being caught with 396 grams (14 ounces) of heroin at the city-state's Changi Airport in 2002.
Singapore says Nguyen's execution must be carried out because drug trafficking is a serious offence that ruins lives.
According to local media, Singapore has granted clemency to six inmates on death row - all Singaporeans - since independence in 1965.
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https://wn.com/Mother_And_Lawyer_Pay_Final_Visit_To_Condemned_Australian
(1 Dec 2005)
1. Various exteriors of Prison Link Centre (Changi) - visiting centre of prison where Nguyen Tuong Van is held
2. Nguyen's mother is helped out of car and guided through door of prison, followed by two other men
3. Mid shot pull to wide of Nguyen's Australian lawyers, Julian McMahon and Lex Lasry, walking to talk to press after last visit to Nguyen
4. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julian McMahon, lawyer for Nguyen Tuong Van
"What I wish to say is he is cheerful because he's composed. He only wishes to think good thoughts, to say good thoughts, do what is right. He is completely rehabilitated, completely reformed, completely focused on doing what is good, and now they are going to kill him. Thank you."
5. Various of lawyers getting into minivan
6. Minivan drives away
7. Press gathered outside prison
8. Various exteriors of prison link centre, guards outside
STORYLINE:
The family of Australian heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van visited the condemned man for
the last time on Thursday, less than 24 hours before his scheduled execution following failed appeals.
Nguyen's mother Kim and twin brother, Nguyen Khoa, entered the jail early on Thursday afternoon.
A friend, Kelly Ng, also visited.
Later his lawyers visited Nguyen.
"He is completely rehabilitated, completely reformed, completely focused on doing what is good and now they are going to kill him," said Julian McMahon, one of Nguyen's Australian lawyers.
Another of Nguyen's lawyers, Lex Lasry, said their last visit was "beautiful" and "uplifting".
Nguyen is scheduled to hang on Friday before dawn at the maximum security Changi Prison where he is incarcerated.
Lasry has criticised Singapore's mandatory death penalty for some drugs cases and attacked the clemency appeal process as lacking transparency.
Singapore refused repeated pleas from Australian leaders for clemency for Nguyen, 25, who received a mandatory death sentence after being caught with 396 grams (14 ounces) of heroin at the city-state's Changi Airport in 2002.
Singapore says Nguyen's execution must be carried out because drug trafficking is a serious offence that ruins lives.
According to local media, Singapore has granted clemency to six inmates on death row - all Singaporeans - since independence in 1965.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 81180
2:00
Singaporean PM says execution will go ahead
(1 Dec 2005)
1. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong walk to lecterns
2. Cutaway of photographer
3. SOUNDBITE: (E...
(1 Dec 2005)
1. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong walk to lecterns
2. Cutaway of photographer
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore Prime Minister:
"This is not a matter discussed between the chancellor and me. Its a Singapore issue. We have stated our position clearly. We take a very serious view of drug trafficking - the penalty is death. In this case it was an enormous amount of drugs being trafficked. Its nearly 400 grammes of pure heroin, which is equivalent to 26,000 doses of heroin if you do it shot by shot. Which means untold misery and suffering to hundreds if not thousands of addicts and their families. The man was charged, convicted, appealed, dismissed. He put up a clemency petition. The clemency petition was considered all factors were taken into account including petitions and letters from Australian leaders. Finally the government decided the law had to take its course. And the law will have to take its course."
4. Cutaway of a reporter's notebook
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore Prime Minister:
"Adjective? Barbaric, well the Australian press is colourful. Many adjectives have been used but we have to... We uphold the rule of law. And the rule of law has to be implied impartially to Singaporeans and foreigners alike. And that is how the Singapore government has to decide."
6. Cutaway of media
7. Merkel and Lee shake hands and walk away
STORYLINE:
Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said on Thursday there would be no clemency for an Australian drug smuggler who is to be
executed at dawn on Friday.
"We take a very serious view of drug trafficking - the penalty is death," Lee said in answer to a question after meeting German Chancellor
Angela Merkel. "The law will have to take its course."
Australia has been lobbying for months to stop the execution of 25-year-old heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van, who received a mandatory
death sentence after he was caught in 2002 at Singapore's Changi Airport on his way home to Melbourne carrying nearly 400 grammes (14 ounces) of heroin.
Earlier on Thursday, Australian Attorney General Philip Ruddock called it "a most unfortunate, barbaric act that is occurring."
Asked about the comment, Lee said "many adjectives" had been used in Australia to describe Van's sentence.
He said Singapore had "taken into account" appeals from Australian leaders for clemency, but noted that the conviction was upheld on appeal and
that the drugs could have caused misery for thousands if they had gone into circulation.
"We uphold the rule of law, and the rule of law has to apply impartially to Singaporeans and foreigners alike," Lee said.
Lee said he didn't discuss the issue with Merkel, who was receiving only her second foreign dignitary since becoming chancellor last week.
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https://wn.com/Singaporean_Pm_Says_Execution_Will_Go_Ahead
(1 Dec 2005)
1. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong walk to lecterns
2. Cutaway of photographer
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore Prime Minister:
"This is not a matter discussed between the chancellor and me. Its a Singapore issue. We have stated our position clearly. We take a very serious view of drug trafficking - the penalty is death. In this case it was an enormous amount of drugs being trafficked. Its nearly 400 grammes of pure heroin, which is equivalent to 26,000 doses of heroin if you do it shot by shot. Which means untold misery and suffering to hundreds if not thousands of addicts and their families. The man was charged, convicted, appealed, dismissed. He put up a clemency petition. The clemency petition was considered all factors were taken into account including petitions and letters from Australian leaders. Finally the government decided the law had to take its course. And the law will have to take its course."
4. Cutaway of a reporter's notebook
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore Prime Minister:
"Adjective? Barbaric, well the Australian press is colourful. Many adjectives have been used but we have to... We uphold the rule of law. And the rule of law has to be implied impartially to Singaporeans and foreigners alike. And that is how the Singapore government has to decide."
6. Cutaway of media
7. Merkel and Lee shake hands and walk away
STORYLINE:
Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said on Thursday there would be no clemency for an Australian drug smuggler who is to be
executed at dawn on Friday.
"We take a very serious view of drug trafficking - the penalty is death," Lee said in answer to a question after meeting German Chancellor
Angela Merkel. "The law will have to take its course."
Australia has been lobbying for months to stop the execution of 25-year-old heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van, who received a mandatory
death sentence after he was caught in 2002 at Singapore's Changi Airport on his way home to Melbourne carrying nearly 400 grammes (14 ounces) of heroin.
Earlier on Thursday, Australian Attorney General Philip Ruddock called it "a most unfortunate, barbaric act that is occurring."
Asked about the comment, Lee said "many adjectives" had been used in Australia to describe Van's sentence.
He said Singapore had "taken into account" appeals from Australian leaders for clemency, but noted that the conviction was upheld on appeal and
that the drugs could have caused misery for thousands if they had gone into circulation.
"We uphold the rule of law, and the rule of law has to apply impartially to Singaporeans and foreigners alike," Lee said.
Lee said he didn't discuss the issue with Merkel, who was receiving only her second foreign dignitary since becoming chancellor last week.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 543334
1:57
Family of Australian on death row arrives in Singapore
(21 Nov 2005) SHOTLIST
1. Various of arrivals board at Changi airport
2. Various of Van Nguyen's mother Kim Nguyen and twin brother Khoa Nguyen walking thro...
(21 Nov 2005) SHOTLIST
1. Various of arrivals board at Changi airport
2. Various of Van Nguyen's mother Kim Nguyen and twin brother Khoa Nguyen walking through airport, surrounded by media
3. Van Nguyen's mother Kim Nguyen and twin brother Khoa Nguyen get in a car with Australian High Commission officials and drive away
STORYLINE
Australia is considering taking Singapore to the International Court of Justice in a bid to prevent the execution of heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van, an Australian citizen, next Friday (Dec 2), Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said on Monday.
Nguyen's mother, Kim Nguyen, and his twin brother Khoa Nguyen arrived at Changi airport in Singapore late on Monday from Melbourne to visit the condemned man.
It was the same airport where Nguyen Tuong Van, 25, was arrested.
His mother and brother didn't speak to reporters at the airport and were whisked away by Australian High Commission officials.
Singapore has refused Canberra's repeated pleas for clemency for Nguyen Tuong Van, who was arrested in 2002 while flying from Cambodia to the southern Australian city of Melbourne, carrying 396 grams (14 ounces) of heroin.
Van Nguyen says he was trafficking heroin to help pay off his twin's debts.
Downer said he would discuss with Van Nguyen's Australian lawyer the option of going to the International Court of Justice in the Netherlands.
But he conceded that Australia would then face the dual hurdles of persuading Singapore to recognise the court's jurisdiction and getting the court to hear the case.
Singapore says it considers all aspects when an appeal is put forth, but clemency pleas have seldom worked in the city-state, especially for death row convicts. Only six have been spared execution since Singapore's independence in 1965.
Last week, the United Nations added its voice to the calls for clemency.
Amnesty International, which has also joined the appeal, says about 420 people have been hanged in Singapore since 1991, giving the Southeast Asian nation of four million the distinction of having the highest per capita execution rate in the world, ahead of countries like China and Saudi Arabia.
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https://wn.com/Family_Of_Australian_On_Death_Row_Arrives_In_Singapore
(21 Nov 2005) SHOTLIST
1. Various of arrivals board at Changi airport
2. Various of Van Nguyen's mother Kim Nguyen and twin brother Khoa Nguyen walking through airport, surrounded by media
3. Van Nguyen's mother Kim Nguyen and twin brother Khoa Nguyen get in a car with Australian High Commission officials and drive away
STORYLINE
Australia is considering taking Singapore to the International Court of Justice in a bid to prevent the execution of heroin trafficker Nguyen Tuong Van, an Australian citizen, next Friday (Dec 2), Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said on Monday.
Nguyen's mother, Kim Nguyen, and his twin brother Khoa Nguyen arrived at Changi airport in Singapore late on Monday from Melbourne to visit the condemned man.
It was the same airport where Nguyen Tuong Van, 25, was arrested.
His mother and brother didn't speak to reporters at the airport and were whisked away by Australian High Commission officials.
Singapore has refused Canberra's repeated pleas for clemency for Nguyen Tuong Van, who was arrested in 2002 while flying from Cambodia to the southern Australian city of Melbourne, carrying 396 grams (14 ounces) of heroin.
Van Nguyen says he was trafficking heroin to help pay off his twin's debts.
Downer said he would discuss with Van Nguyen's Australian lawyer the option of going to the International Court of Justice in the Netherlands.
But he conceded that Australia would then face the dual hurdles of persuading Singapore to recognise the court's jurisdiction and getting the court to hear the case.
Singapore says it considers all aspects when an appeal is put forth, but clemency pleas have seldom worked in the city-state, especially for death row convicts. Only six have been spared execution since Singapore's independence in 1965.
Last week, the United Nations added its voice to the calls for clemency.
Amnesty International, which has also joined the appeal, says about 420 people have been hanged in Singapore since 1991, giving the Southeast Asian nation of four million the distinction of having the highest per capita execution rate in the world, ahead of countries like China and Saudi Arabia.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 105122
-
Satsang By Gracious Master Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj - Sep 23, 2020
#SantRajinderSinghJi #LiveStream #Satsang
For Live Telecast along with audio translations, Please visit https://www.sos.org/sant-rajinder-singh/live
published: 26 Sep 2020
-
Satsang By Gracious Master Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj - Feb 10, 2021
#SantRajinderSinghJi #LiveStream #Satsang
For Live Telecast along with audio translations, Please visit https://www.sos.org/sant-rajinder-singh/live
published: 11 Feb 2021
-
Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj | Sweet Memory
published: 01 Mar 2020
-
ਖ਼ਾਲਸਾ ਬਾਜਾਂ ਵਾਲੇ ਦਾ - Sant Baba Darshan Singh Ji Khalsa Tapoban Dhakki Sahib Wale
ਸਾਧ ਸੰਗਤ ਜੀ,
ਵਾਹਿਗੁਰੂ ਜੀ ਕਾ ਖਾਲਸਾ
ਵਾਹਿਗੁਰੂ ਜੀ ਕੀ ਫਤਹਿ ।।
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published: 23 May 2021
-
Word Becomes Flesh excepts by Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj
Word becomes Flesh excepts from Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj and Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj read by David Smith Sant Mat the mystical and esoteric side forming an Underlying Unity of All religions play of love
published: 20 Jul 2019
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published: 02 Jun 2017
1:01:55
Satsang By Gracious Master Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj - Sep 23, 2020
#SantRajinderSinghJi #LiveStream #Satsang
For Live Telecast along with audio translations, Please visit https://www.sos.org/sant-rajinder-singh/live
#SantRajinderSinghJi #LiveStream #Satsang
For Live Telecast along with audio translations, Please visit https://www.sos.org/sant-rajinder-singh/live
https://wn.com/Satsang_By_Gracious_Master_Sant_Darshan_Singh_Ji_Maharaj_Sep_23,_2020
#SantRajinderSinghJi #LiveStream #Satsang
For Live Telecast along with audio translations, Please visit https://www.sos.org/sant-rajinder-singh/live
- published: 26 Sep 2020
- views: 20222
1:00:06
Satsang By Gracious Master Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj - Feb 10, 2021
#SantRajinderSinghJi #LiveStream #Satsang
For Live Telecast along with audio translations, Please visit https://www.sos.org/sant-rajinder-singh/live
#SantRajinderSinghJi #LiveStream #Satsang
For Live Telecast along with audio translations, Please visit https://www.sos.org/sant-rajinder-singh/live
https://wn.com/Satsang_By_Gracious_Master_Sant_Darshan_Singh_Ji_Maharaj_Feb_10,_2021
#SantRajinderSinghJi #LiveStream #Satsang
For Live Telecast along with audio translations, Please visit https://www.sos.org/sant-rajinder-singh/live
- published: 11 Feb 2021
- views: 16475
0:58
ਖ਼ਾਲਸਾ ਬਾਜਾਂ ਵਾਲੇ ਦਾ - Sant Baba Darshan Singh Ji Khalsa Tapoban Dhakki Sahib Wale
ਸਾਧ ਸੰਗਤ ਜੀ,
ਵਾਹਿਗੁਰੂ ਜੀ ਕਾ ਖਾਲਸਾ
ਵਾਹਿਗੁਰੂ ਜੀ ਕੀ ਫਤਹਿ ।।
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- published: 23 May 2021
- views: 107542
8:59
Word Becomes Flesh excepts by Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj
Word becomes Flesh excepts from Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj and Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj read by David Smith Sant Mat the mystical and esoteric side for...
Word becomes Flesh excepts from Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj and Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj read by David Smith Sant Mat the mystical and esoteric side forming an Underlying Unity of All religions play of love
https://wn.com/Word_Becomes_Flesh_Excepts_By_Sant_Darshan_Singh_Ji_Maharaj
Word becomes Flesh excepts from Sant Darshan Singh Ji Maharaj and Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj read by David Smith Sant Mat the mystical and esoteric side forming an Underlying Unity of All religions play of love
- published: 20 Jul 2019
- views: 27
1:00:20
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Album: MAA DE FARZ
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T-Series Shabad Gurbani presents MAA DE FARZ || SINGH SAHIB PROF.DARSHAN SINGH KHALSA || PUNJABI DEVOTIONAL || FULL ALBUM ||
Shabad: MAA DE FARZ
Album: MAA DE FARZ
Singer: SINGH SAHIB PROF.DARSHAN SINGH KHALSA
Music: SINGH SAHIB PROF.DARSHAN SINGH KHALSA
Lyrics: TRADITIONAL . .
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- published: 02 Jun 2017
- views: 35411