Yahoo – AFP,
Nick Perry, 26 April 2015
Indonesia on Sunday signalled it was determined to push ahead with the execution of eight foreign drug convicts, despite a growing wave of global condemnation led by United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon.
Indonesia on Sunday signalled it was determined to push ahead with the execution of eight foreign drug convicts, despite a growing wave of global condemnation led by United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon.
Authorities
on Saturday gave formal notice to the eight -- from Australia, Brazil, Nigeria
and the Philippines -- that they would be executed by firing squad imminently,
along with an Indonesian prisoner.
However, a
Frenchman also on death row for drug-related crimes was granted a temporary
reprieve after Paris stepped up pressure on Jakarta.
The group
have been moved to the high-security prison island of Nusakambangan, where
Indonesia puts condemned prisoners to death, and Jakarta says the executions
could be as early as Tuesday although no official date has been set.
Attorney
General Muhammad Prasetyo told Indonesian news channel MetroTV that
preparations for the executions were "100 percent" complete.
The
convicts recently lost appeals for mercy to President Joko Widodo, who has
taken a hard line against drug traffickers and refused to back down on the
executions despite mounting international criticism.
UN chief
Ban added his voice to appeals for the convicts to be spared.
"The
secretary general urges President Joko Widodo to urgently consider declaring a
moratorium on capital punishment in Indonesia, with a view toward
abolition," a spokesman for Ban said.
Australia,
which has mounted a sustained diplomatic campaign to save its two citizens in
the group, also renewed appeals following Saturday's news.
"Nothing
can be gained and much will be lost if these two young Australians are
executed," said Foreign Minister Julie Bishop.
"I again
respectfully call on the president of Indonesia to reconsider his refusal to
grant clemency. It is not too late for a change of heart."
Widodo
refused to comment on Sunday.
France has
stepped up pressure on Jakarta in recent days, with President Francois Hollande
warning of "consequences" if its citizen, Serge Atlaoui, is put to
death.
The warning
came shortly before it was announced that Atlaoui had won a temporary reprieve
to allow him to pursue a further legal appeal.
Brazil
vowed to press Indonesia not to execute its national Rodrigo Gularte for
humanitarian reasons, saying he suffers from schizophrenia.
No
backing down
Australian
drug traffickers Andrew
Chan (left) and Myuran Sukumaran
wait in a holding cell
during their
2006 trial in Denpasar, Indonesia
(AFP Photo/Jewel Samad)
|
"We
note the statement by the UN but we also note that there was no similar
statement made when recently two Indonesians were executed," ministry
spokesman Arrmanatha Nasir told AFP, referring to the execution this month of
Indonesian domestic workers in Saudi Arabia.
He added
that it was "not the intention of Indonesia" to damage ties with
other countries.
The
executions have been delayed for weeks, with Indonesia coming close to carrying
them out in February, but then agreeing to let final legal appeals be resolved
following an international outcry.
However
Saturday's announcement signals they are finally going ahead.
While
Jakarta has not announced a date, lawyers for two of the convicts -- the
Filipina and one of the Nigerians -- said they had been informed it would be on
Tuesday.
Authorities
have said they are awaiting the outcome of the appeal by the sole Indonesian in
the group, which could come as early as Monday.
Relatives
of the condemned prisoners have been rushing to Cilacap, the town that serves
as the gateway to Nusakambangan.
The family
of the Australians, heroin traffickers Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran,
arrived Saturday to visit the men, crossing over to Nusakambangan accompanied
by embassy officials.
"We
ask that the president please, please show mercy," Sukumaran's brother
Chinthu told reporters.
Echoing his
plea, Chan's brother Michael said, "He's the only one that can stop
it."
"It's
not too late to do so," he added. "I please ask the president, please
show mercy."
Indonesian
troops conduct security exercise
around Nusakambangan maximum security
prison
island, seen in the background, off
central Java island, on April 24, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Azka)
|
Veloso's
lawyer Edre Olalia said her legal team had filed a request for a second
judicial review of her case and Indonesian authorities had promised to let all
appeals run their course before the executions.
"We
are not giving up, we will never give up," Olalia told reporters in
Cilacap, adding that Veloso was "an innocent mother".
Gularte's
lawyer Ricky Gunawan said his legal team would also submit a request for a
second judicial review of his case on Monday as well as medical proof of his
mental illness.
He said he
met Gularte to discuss the legal process "but unfortunately his mental
capacity is not adequate to understand about situation now he is facing".
Three of
the African traffickers are confirmed as being from Nigeria. However it is not
clear whether the fourth holds Ghanaian or Nigerian nationality.
Indonesia
has some of the world's toughest anti-drugs laws. In January it executed six
drug convicts including five foreigners, sparking international outrage.
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