Bangkok Post

5 ‘smugglers’ face firing squad

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Five accused drug smugglers from Hong Kong, Chile, Switzerlan­d and Thailand who were caught in Bali could face the firing squad if convicted, police on the Indonesian holiday island said yesterday.

The group, arrested in separate incidents this month and in November, were paraded in shackles and orange jumpsuits at Bali’s airport customs office, escorted by machine-gun toting police — a common practice in Indonesia.

Muslim-majority Indonesia has some of the world’s toughest drug laws, including the death penalty.

While death sentences are often reduced to long jail terms, Indonesia has executed foreign nationals in the past, including two Australian mastermind­s of the “Bali Nine” heroin gang who were shot in 2015.

Two of the five are from Hong Kong. The men were caught with 3.2 kilogramme­s and 4kg of methamphet­amine respective­ly, police said.

The Chilean suspect was allegedly carrying 77 grammes of meth, while a Swiss citizen was arrested with 30 grammes of marijuana in his possession, police said.

The Thai man had nearly 18g of marijuana, they added.

“The law allows for a life sentence or the death penalty,” Ida Bagus Komang Ardika, head of the Bali police narcotics unit, told reporters

A sixth female accused from

Singapore who was caught with a small amount of cocaine would not face the death penalty, authoritie­s said.

Indonesia has slowed the pace of its executions in recent years despite broad public support for the penalty.

In October, police said two Thai women and a Frenchman could face the death penalty after they were caught smuggling drugs into Bali.

A French drug trafficker briefly on death row saw his sentence commuted to 19 years this summer.

There are dozens of smugglers on death row in Indonesia, including a cocaine-traffickin­g British grandmothe­r, an American caught with crystal methamphet­amine, and several west African inmates.

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