The question still remains to be addressed: where in the hell did 18 pounds of smack come from? It certainly was not grown and processed in Indonesia where anti-drug laws are now so draconian that even Tylenol #3 cannot be obtained through a prescription and terminal patients are being denied pain medication - thanks to criminals such as these AU scumbags who deserve to be shot for this reason alone
INQUISITR
02/24/2015
Indonesia’s president Joko Widodo has warned foreign countries not to intervene in his government’s right to use capital punishment. According to
IoL News President Joko Widodo has denied clemency to 11 convicts on death row, most on drugs charges, despite repeated pleas from Australia, Brazil and France, who all have citizens due to be executed by firing squad.
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AU drug runners Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran |
Widodo has told reporters that the executions will not be delayed after an Indonesian court dismissed a legal challenge to the execution of Bali Nine ringleaders Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan. According to
Reuters Joko Widodo defended his country’s rights to use the death penalty in drug smuggling cases.
“The first thing I need to say firmly is that there shouldn’t be any intervention towards the death penalty because it is our sovereign right to exercise our law.”
Ironically Joko Widodo was accused of “
double standards” last week as it was reported that he had ordered Indonesian officials to use all means possible to try to secure clemency for Indonesian citizens who are on death row elsewhere in the world.
Widodo has repeatedly refused clemency to drug smugglers since he came to power in 2014 and has vowed that his country’s war against the smugglers would continue.
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Indonesian President Joko Widodo |
Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan were the ringleaders of the so-called “Bali Nine” drug smuggling gang, and were arrested for trying to traffic heroin out of Indonesia in 2005 and sentenced to death the following year. Gulf News states that their
appeals for presidential clemency, typically a death row convict’s final chance of avoiding the firing squad, were rejected by new President Joko Widodo in recent months.
Lawyers acting for Sukumaran and Chan appealed to the Administrative Court in Jakarta to challenge Joko Widodo’s refusal to grant them clemency, but the court has today dismissed that appeal saying that “clemency is the prerogative of the president… the state administrative court has no right to rule on the challenge.”
Whilst there is a right of appeal against the courts decision it is thought the chances of success are very slim. Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott has made repeated pleas to Joko Widodo asking for the men to be spared, but his pleas have fallen on deaf ears.
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AU Prime Minister Tony Abbot attempted to tie tsunami aid
to drug traffickers, outraged Indonesians responded with a
symbolic collection of "coins for Abbot"
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It is not clear when the executions will take place but the
Sydney Morning Herald quotes Bali’s chief prosecutor, Momock Bambang Samiarso, who has signalled the men are likely to be transferred to Nusakamabangan island this week, meaning their executions are imminent. Tensions between Australia and Indonesia have reportedly increased over the imminent executions and Joko Widodo is apparently furious that Abbott referred to the granting of $1 Billion in aid after the Boxing Day tsunami in his appeal for clemency for Sukumaran and Chan.
It seems that Joko Widodo has now extinguished all hope and the executions could take place within days.
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