A Singaporean woman, 41, has been jailed for 30 years on Tuesday, over the torture and death of a maid Piang Ngai Don from Myanmar in 2016.
The accused, Gaiyathiri Murugayan, had pleaded guilty in February to 28 charges, including culpable homocide, related to the death of Piang Ngai Don, who was starved and weighed 24 kilogrammes when she died.
According to reports, Judge Kee See Ohn on Tuesday described the case as “one of the worst” the city-state’s courts had seen.
Earlier, the court heard that Piang faced almost daily physical assault during her 14 months working for Murugayan, that she was mostly fed bread and water, was beaten and burned, and for the last 12 days of her life, she was tied to a window grille at night while forced to sleep on a floor.
Prosecutors had previously sought a life sentence for Murugayan after Singapore’s attorney general recommended the accused be charged with murder.
The defense had made a maximum sentence of nine years, saying Murugayan was a first-time offender who was stressed over her children’s illnesses, which she blamed on Piang Ngai Don.
Murugayan’s mother and policeman husband also face related charges.
Around 250,000 migrants from less well-off neighbouring countries work as maids or domestic help in wealthy Singapore, where, of a population of around 5.7 million people, 1.6 million are migrants or foreign-born workers.
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