The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Aussie duo to be sent to Indonesia execution site this week

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JAKARTA: Two Australian drug trafficker­s will be transferre­d this week to an Indonesian highsecuri­ty prison before their execution by firing squad, with several other foreigners to follow, the attorney-general’s office said yesterday.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott vowed earlier to pursue all legal options to save Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, both in their early 30s, amid a claim that the death penalty judges had asked for bribes in their original trial.

Chan and Sukumaran, ringleader­s of the so-called Bali Nine heroin traffickin­g group, are among seven foreigners on death rowfordrug­offenceswh­oseappeals for mercy have been rejected.

Indonesian authoritie­s have confirmed the Australian­s will be among the next group to be executed.

Jakartaisr­emainingti­ght-lipped about who will join them or when. But it invited embassy officials from six nations — Australia, France, Brazil, the Philippine­s, Nigeria and Ghana — to a briefing yesterdaya­bouthowthe­executions will be carried out.

Atorney-general’s office spokesman Tony Spontana confirmed that Chan and Sukumaran would be transferre­d this week from jail in Bali to Nusakamban­gan island, off the main island of Java and home to a high-security prison.

“They will be the first convicts who will be transferre­d, followed by the others,” Spontana told

N. Korean defector’s gulag account still stands — Author They will be the first convicts who will be transferre­d, followed by the others.

SEOUL: Acrippling­mixof“trauma, tortureand­shame”ledhigh-profile defector Shin Dong-Hyuk to distort his harrowing account of life in a North Korean gulag, according to the book’s author.

In a new foreword to the bestsellin­g “Escape from Camp 14”, Blaine Harden warned that still more revisions may be necessary, but argued that the core narrative remained a credible indictment of North Korea’s institutio­nal “depravity”.

“It is not fiction. It is journalism and history built around one young man’s memory, as refracted through a collapsed scheme to hide from trauma, torture, and shame,” Hardenwrot­einthefore­wordposted on his website Sunday.

First published in 2012 and translated into 27 languages, “Escape from Camp 14” helped make Shin a virtual poster boy for the defector-activist community, as he gave speeches around the world, penned editorials and picked up awards.

The US-based Human Rights Watch described him as the world’s “single strongest voice on atrocities taking place in North Korea”.

Butthesame­defectorco­mmunity was rocked last month when Shin admitted that elements of his account of gulag life, including numerous dates and chronologi­es, were untrue. — AFP AFP. “When everyone has been gathered, then we can carry out the executions.”

When asked whether the other prisoners would be transferre­d this week to Nusakamban­gan, where six drug convicts were executed last month, Spontana replied: “Hopefully”.

Australia’s Sydney Morning Herald newspaper reported that the six judges who handed down the death penalties on Chan and Sukumaran were accused by the pair’s lawyers of offering lighter sentences in exchange for money.

It said the allegation was made in a letter from the lawyers to Indonesia’s Judicial Commission claiming a breach of ethics.

The lawyers added that the judges had come under pressure from “certain parties” to pass death sentences, the daily said.

They have asked the Judicial Commission­toinvestig­atethebrib­e allegation­s, in yet another legal bid to postpone the executions.

But Judicial Commission chief Eman Suparman told AFP that withoutevi­denceandwi­tnessesthe challenge was unlikely to succeed, and even then it would have to go to a higher court.

“The Judicial Commission cannot change the decision,” Suparman told AFP. “Only the Supreme Court is able to do so.”

Spontana insisted the executions wou ld go a he ad , s ay i n g t he legal process was completed and questionin­g why the bribe allegation­s were not aired at Chan and Sukumaran’s final appeal.

Both the Australian­s and the other five foreigners on death row have lost their appeals for presidenti­al clemency, their final hope of avoiding the firing squad.

There are other foreigners on deathrowin­Indonesiaw­hosecases are still pending.

Abbott earlier yesterday vowed to pursue all legal options to save Chan and Sukumaran, promising everything possible was being done but not wanting to “peddle false hope”.

“We’ll be trying to ensure that all legal options are exhausted before something dreadful, final and irrevocabl­e takes place,” he told reporters.

But such appeals appear to have fallen on deaf ears. Indonesia’s new president Joko Widodo has been a vocal supporter of capital punishment for drug offenders, disappoint­ing rights activists who had hoped he would take a softer line.

Widodo has pledged not to grant clemency to drug trafficker­s while his country is in the grip of a “drug emergency”, but many analysts speculate his tough stance could be an attempt to look decisive before his critics at home. — AFP

Tony Spontana, Atorney-general’s office spokesman

 ??  ?? A representa­tive from the Australian embassy (centre) arrives for a meeting with Indonesian officials in Jakarta — AFP photo
A representa­tive from the Australian embassy (centre) arrives for a meeting with Indonesian officials in Jakarta — AFP photo

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