Felix Dorfin was arrested in September carrying a suitcase filled with about three kilograms of drugs, including ecstasy and amphetamines (AFP Photo/ARSYAD ALI) |
An Indonesian court sentenced Frenchman Felix Dorfin to death for drug smuggling on Monday, in a shock verdict after prosecutors asked for a 20-year jail term.
Dorfin, 35,
was arrested in September carrying a suitcase filled with about three kilograms
(6.6 pounds) of drugs including ecstasy and amphetamines at the airport in
Lombok, a holiday island next to Bali where foreigners are routinely arrested
on drugs charges.
Indonesia
has some of the world's strictest drug laws -- including death by firing squad
for some drug traffickers and it has executed foreigners in the past.
While
prosecutors had not asked for the death penalty, Indonesian courts have been
known to go beyond their demands.
"After
finding Felix Dorfin legally and convincingly guilty of importing narcotics ...
(he) is sentenced to the death penalty," presiding judge Isnurul Syamsul
Arif told the court.
He cited
Dorfin's involvement in an international drug syndicate and the amount of drugs
in his possession as aggravating factors.
"The
defendant's actions could potentially do damage to the younger
generation," Arif added.
The
Frenchman made headlines in January when he escaped from a police detention
centre and spent nearly two weeks on the run before he was captured.
A female
police officer was arrested for allegedly helping Dorfin escape from jail in
exchange for money.
It was not
clear if the jailbreak played any role in Monday's stiffer-than-expected
sentence.
Dorfin, who
is from Bethune in northern France, sat impassively through much of the hearing
in front of three judges, as a translator scribbled notes beside him.
He said
little as he walked past reporters to a holding cell after the sentencing.
"Dorfin
was shocked," the Frenchman's lawyer Deny Nur Indra told AFP.
"He
didn't expect this at all because prosecutors only asked for 20 years."
The lawyer
said he would appeal against the sentence, describing his client as a
"victim" who did not know the exact contents of what he was carrying.
"If he
had known, he wouldn't have brought it here," Indra added.
In 2015,
Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran -- the accused ringleaders of the
Bali Nine heroin smuggling gang -- were executed by firing squad in Indonesia.
The case
sparked diplomatic outrage and a call to abolish the death penalty.
The Bali
Nine gang's only female member was released from jail last year, while some
others remain in prison.
A number of
foreigners in Indonesia are on death row including cocaine-smuggling British
grandmother Lindsay Sandiford and Serge Atlaoui, a Frenchman who has been on
death row since 2007.
Last year,
eight Taiwanese drug smugglers were sentenced to death by an Indonesian court
after being caught with around a tonne of crystal methamphetamine.
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