Indonesian government prepares to murder two members of 'Bali Nine'

hashmander

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that is seriously fukked up :merchant:, but they knew the laws going in. it's like people in the drug trade, you know it's likely that you will get killed. it's like they figured they would take the risk drug running because their aussie passports might save them. :ld:
 

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Bali Nine: officials given all-clear to move pair for execution
Indonesian officials have granted permission to transfer Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran out of Kerobokan jail

Bali-Nine-composite-011.jpg

Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran attempted to smuggle more than 8kg of heroin out of Indonesia in 2005 and now face the firing squad. Photograph: supplied
Australian Associated Press

Thursday 12 February 2015 19.20 AEST



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Bali officials have been granted permission to transfer Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran out of Kerobokan jail for their executions.

Momock Bambang Samiarso, head of Bali provincial prosecutors, said a meeting on Thursday afternoon confirmed the Bali Nine pair would be transferred to be executed outside of Bali.

A meeting on Friday will confirm the date of their transfer.

Prosecutors are trying to keep the transfer a secret, and the official avoided confirming the men would be taken to Nusakambangan, a prison island off central Java.

“We ask it to be as soon as possible,” he said.

He also promised to give Chan, Sukumaran and their families the required 72 hours notice of their executions.

The meeting came after heartfelt pleas in parliament by Julie Bishop and Tanya Plibersek, and the Indonesian foreign minister’s reiteration that the men be dealt the ultimate punishment.

In an at times emotional speech to federal parliament, Bishop said the Sydney pair’s attempt to smuggle more than 8kg of heroin out of Indonesia in 2005 was a grave crime that deserved punishment. But they didn’t deserve to pay with their lives.

“Both men are deeply, sincerely remorseful for their actions,” Bishop said. “Both men have made extraordinary efforts to rehabilitate.”

Opposition foreign affairs spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek followed with an equally powerful argument against the pair’s executions.

Tanya Plibersek’s speech to parliament. Link to video

She reflected on her husband Michael Coutts-Trotter’s drug conviction 30 years ago, and what a loss it would have been if he was punished with death.

“They would have missed out on a man who spent the rest of his life making amends for the crime that he committed,” she said.

Indonesian foreign minister Retno Marsudi said she had received letters from both women and phone calls from the minister. Her replies were clear and consistent, she said.

“I have told Julie that this is not against a country, this is not against nationals of a certain country, but this is against a crime, against an extraordinary crime,” she told reporters in Jakarta.

“We will keep on communicating, explaining, in consistent language like that.”

While Indonesia and Australia keep trading views on the death penalty to no effect for Chan and Sukumaran, their families have continued visiting their prison daily.

Artist Ben Quilty and Victorian supreme court Judge Lex Lasry joined them on Thursday.

Only president Joko Widodo can save the men from execution but he gave a defiant vow this week not to succumb to outside pressure on the death penalty for drug felons.

In her statement, Bishop said besides more than 55 ministerial and prime ministerial representations for the men, high-profile Australians had made “discreet overtures to their influential Indonesian contacts”.

The Indonesian government says around 18,000 deaths annually are due to drugs, but the researchers who compiled the report have said it was only ever intended to give a general picture of drug use.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/feb/12/bali-nine-duo-to-be-moved-for-execution
 

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Chan and Sukumaran not the only prisoners Indonesia is ready to execute
Seven other drug offenders who have been denied presidential clemency may be among those executed this month, along with the Australians



People light candles at a vigil in Sydney for Chan and Sukumaran. Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP
Australian Associated Press

Friday 13 February 2015 08.40 AEST



The following prisoners have been denied presidential clemency as drug offenders and will possibly be among those executed this month, along with Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran:

Martin Anderson (alias Belo, from Ghana)
Sentenced to death by South Jakarta district court in June 2004 after being convicted of possessing 50g of heroin in Jakarta in November 2003

Zainal Abidin (Indonesia)
Initially sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment by Palembang district court in September 2001 for smuggling 58.7kg of marijuana. He was later sentenced to death by the Palembang high court in December 2001

Raheem Agbaje Salami (Nigeria)
Initially sentenced to life imprisonment by Surabaya district court in April 1999 for smuggling 5.3kg of heroin into Indonesia at the East Java city’s airport in September 1998. In May 2006 he was sentenced to death by the supreme court and was not able to appeal to a higher court, according to Amnesty International

Rodrigo Gularte (Brazil)
Sentenced to death by the Tangerang district court in February 2005 for smuggling 6kg of cocaine into Jakarta. According to his lawyer, he has paranoid schizophrenia and has not been able to discuss his case with his counsel

Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso (Philippines)
Sentenced to death in October 2010 for attempting to smuggle 2.6kg of heroin into Indonesia from Malaysia in April 2010. Veloso, who comes from a poor rural family in the Philippines, was reportedly acting as a courier for an international syndicate when she was arrested on arrival at Yogyakarta, central Java from an Air Asia flight from Kuala Lumpur

Serge Areski Atlaoui (France)
Father of four was arrested near Jakarta in 2005 in a secret laboratory producing ecstasy. He has always denied the charges, saying he was installing machinery in what he thought was an acrylics factory

Sylvester Obiekwe (alias Mustopa, from Nigeria)
First arrested in 2003 for smuggling 1.2kg of heroin into Indonesia. He has since been caught operating drugs syndicates even from death row, and is considered a priority for execution.


Source: Amnesty International, media reports.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...or-transfer-from-bali-jail-ahead-of-execution
 

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Julie Bishop says executing Bali Nine pair might hurt Australian tourism to Indonesia
Foreign minister says Australians will demonstrate ‘deep disapproval’ of Indonesia’s actions, including by making decisions about their holidays

Bali-Nine-composite-011.jpg

Andrew Chan, left, and Myuran Sukumaran. Photograph: supplied
Bridie Jabour and agencies


@bkjabour

Friday 13 February 2015 11.18 AEST



Julie Bishop has warned tourism to Bali could be threatened if Indonesia goes ahead with the execution of two Australian drug smugglers.

Permission has been granted for Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran to be transferred from their Bali prison for their execution, though a date is yet to be officially set.

A day after she pleaded for clemency in parliament, the foreign minister said Australians could be turned off holidaying in Bali if Indonesia went through with the execution.

“I think the Australian people will demonstrate their deep disapproval of this action, including by making decisions about where they wish to holiday,” she told Fairfax radio on Friday.

Her comments were also echoed by former high court judge, Michael Kirby, who said it was “sadly” likely the case Australians would reconsider their holiday destinations.

Bishop said the government would leave no stone unturned in its bid to secure a stay on the Bali Nine members’ executions.

“Executing these two young men will not solve the drug scourge in Indonesia,” she said.

“It’s a very tense situation.”

Kirby said a dip in tourism was only one potential consequence of Indonesia executing the two Australians.

“Right to the very end I would expect the Australian government, with the support of the opposition and Australian people, will be making representations,” he said on Sky News.

“In that respect we will be following the endeavors that Indonesia follows in respect of its citizens when they are facing death overseas.”

Kirby said there was still a question over whether the death penalty was a deterrent for crime and emphasised the heroin was being smuggled out of Indonesia, not in to Indonesia.

“The important thing in this case this was not Indonesian drug dealing, it was Australian drug dealing, these were Australians who are getting on to an Australian plane to bring them back to Australia with Indonesian drugs,” he said.

When asked if he thought Bishop should do a last minute “mercy dash” to Indonesia, Kirby responded that he thought “additional steps” would be taken.

As the pair’s lawyers make a last ditch effort to stop the execution through the courts, Momock Bambang Samiarso, head of Bali provincial prosecutors, said a meeting on Thursday afternoon confirmed the pair would be transferred away from Bali for execution.

Sukumaran and Chan were sentenced to death for their part in an attempt to smuggle more than 8kg of heroin in 2005. Seven other Australians are in jail in Indonesia for their roles in the plot.

Prosecutors are trying to keep the transfer a secret, and the official avoided confirming the men would be taken to Nusakambangan, a prison island off central Java.

“We ask it to be as soon as possible,” Samiarso said.

The date of the transfer was due to be confirmed on Friday. Chan, Sukumaran and their families will be given 72 hours’ notice of the date of execution.

Indonesian lawyer Todung Mulya Lubis said on Wednesday the legal team would go to an administrative court to argue Indonesian president Joko Widodo could not make a sweeping rejection of clemency appeals based on his declared “drug emergency” in the country, but must assess each individually.

Australia has made repeated attempts to have the execution stayed. On Friday the education minister, Christopher Pyne, said the government had done “absolutely everything” it could.

“The problem with the way Indonesians see this matter is that they have five million ... drug addicts in Indonesia, they take a very, very firm line on drug smuggling,” he told Channel Nine.

Pyne said that while the government had done “all it can” for the pair, “at the end of the day Indonesia is a sovereign nation”.

“They’re their laws, we don’t support them, we don’t agree with them,” he said. “It’ll be a great tragedy if those two young men face the death penalty.”

Foreign minister Julie Bishop and Labor’s foreign affairs spokeswoman, Tanya Plibersek, made heartfelt pleas for clemency in parliament on Thursday.

Bishop said the Sydney pair’s attempt to smuggle more than 8kg of heroin was a grave crime that deserved punishment. But they didn’t deserve to pay with their lives.

“Both men are deeply, sincerely remorseful for their actions,” Bishop said. “Both men have made extraordinary efforts to rehabilitate.”

Plibersek followed with an equally powerful argument against the pair’s executions.

She reflected on her husband Michael Coutts-Trotter’s drug conviction 30 years ago, and what a loss it would have been if he was punished with death.

“They would have missed out on a man who spent the rest of his life making amends for the crime that he committed,” she said.

The Indonesian foreign minister Retno Marsudi said she had received letters from both women and phone calls from the minister. Her replies were clear and consistent, she said.

“I have told Julie that this is not against a country, this is not against nationals of a certain country, but this is against a crime, against an extraordinary crime,” she told reporters in Jakarta.

“We will keep on communicating, explaining, in consistent language like that.”

The families of Chan and Sukumaran have continued visiting them daily in prison. The artist Ben Quilty and Victorian supreme court judge Lex Lasry joined them on Thursday.

Only Widodo can save the men from execution, but he gave a defiant vow this week not to succumb to outside pressure on the death penalty for drug felons.

In her statement, Bishop said besides more than 55 ministerial and prime ministerial representations for the men, high-profile Australians had made “discreet overtures to their influential Indonesian contacts”.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...or-transfer-from-bali-jail-ahead-of-execution
 

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Ban Ki-moon makes plea to Indonesia over executions
UN ‘opposes death penalty in all circumstances’, says secretary general, while Tony Abbott says Indonesia should heed Australia’s appeals for clemency



Ban Ki-Moon has called on Indonesia to call off the upcoming executions. Photograph: AP
Staff and agencies

Saturday 14 February 2015 13.50 AEST


Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary general, has joined calls for Indonesia to cancel the execution of nine people, including the Australian citizens Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, for drug crimes.

The intervention came as Tony Abbott said “millions of Australians” were alarmed by the imminent fate of the pair. The prime minister called on Indonesia to be “responsive” to Australia’s pleas to spare them.

Diplomats from Australia and other countries with citizens on Indonesia’s death row have been summoned to a meeting in Jakarta on Monday to be told of official procedures for the executions. They would not be told of the date at the meeting, an Indonesian official said, but 72 hours’ notice was under discussion.

Ban spoke with the Indonesian foreign minister, Retno Marsudi, on Thursday “to express his concern at the recent application of capital punishment in Indonesia”, said UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric.

“The United Nations opposes the death penalty under all circumstances,” Dujarric said. “The secretary general appeals to the Indonesian authorities that the executions of the remaining prisoners on death row for drug-related offences not be carried out.”

Tony Abbott said on Saturday: “Millions of Australians are feeling very, very upset about what may soon happen to two Australians in Indonesia.

“My plea even at this late stage is for Indonesia to be as responsive to us as it expects other countries to be to them when they plead for the life of their citizens.”

Chan, 31, and Sukumaran, 33, could be spending their last days in Kerobokan jail, where they have been for 10 years after their attempt to smuggle heroin out of Indonesia.

Authorities have given permission for them to be moved to the prison island Nusakambangan, on a date to be determined, for execution.

Senior figures from all sides of politics in Australia have repeatedly urged President Joko Widodo to spare the men.

Besides more than 55 ministerial and prime ministerial representations, Australian officials and members of the business community are understood to have made overtures to Indonesian contacts.

The foreign minister, Julie Bishop, said she had been flooded with letters concerning the executions and there was strong support at vigils for the men.

Bishop has warned that Australian tourism to Bali – a crucial source of income for the island – could be threatened if Indonesia goes ahead with the executions.

“I think the Australian people will demonstrate their deep disapproval of this action, including by making decisions about where they wish to holiday,” she told Fairfax radio on Friday.

“Executing these two young men will not solve the drug scourge in Indonesia.”

Joko has given a defiant vow not to succumb to outside pressure.

06a3e86e-7f1b-48fb-bb44-098dfb8dd793-620x372.jpeg

File photograph of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, the two Australian citizens facing execution in Indonesia for drug trafficking. Photograph: Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty
Lawyers for Chan and Sukumaran are challenging the president’s blanket denial of clemency for all drug offenders sentenced to death.

The former Australian high court justice, Michael Kirby, said the heroin was being smuggled out of Indonesia, not into Indonesia.

“The important thing in this case this was not Indonesian drug dealing, it was Australian drug dealing, these were Australians who are getting on to an Australian plane to bring them back to Australia with Indonesian drugs,” he said.

Reuters and AAP contributed to this report




http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...ls-on-indonesia-not-to-execute-bali-nine-pair
 

CHL

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Smuggle drugs into Indonesia brehs :mjcry:
They weren't even smuggling them into Indonesia though :mjcry: it was from Indonesia back to Australia, and they should have been able to have the trial here.

The AFP betrayed them
 

I.AM.PIFF

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They weren't even smuggling them into Indonesia though :mjcry: it was from Indonesia back to Australia, and they should have been able to have the trial here.

The AFP betrayed them

Oh, thought they did smuggle it into Indonesia but I didn't read the article :russ:
 

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Bali Nine pair to be transferred this week for execution, say officials
Indonesian officials intend to transfer Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran to Nusa Kambangan prison this week, it has been confirmed

c74a48c8-afbc-43f3-88b2-87c12137c794-620x372.jpeg

Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran will be transferred to Nusa Kambangan prison this week, according to reports. Photograph: Firdia Lisnawati/AP
Guardian staff and agencies

Monday 16 February 2015 18.50 AEST



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Bali officials have confirmed Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan will be moved this week to an island in Central Java for their executions

Momock Bambang Samiarso, head of Bali’s provincial prosecutors office, held the final meeting to coordinate the task on Monday.

He told reporters afterwards the pair would be moved “this week, as soon as possible”, but probably not on Tuesday.

He said they would likely be transferred by air, possibly on a commercial flight.

Their families would be notified “for sure, very soon”.

The coordination meeting in Bali involved several government agencies.

Albertus Julius Benny Mokalu, head of Bali’s provincial police, told reporters 10 officers would guard Chan and Sukumaran for the journey to Cilacap, the departure point for Nusa Kambangan island.

More would be required for the trip from Kerobokan to the airport, he said.

“We’re coordinating with local related officers, including the military about how this transfer for execution can be safe,” he said.

In Jakarta, representatives from the Australian embassy attended a foreign affairs ministry briefing on procedural matters concerning the executions. They left without speaking to reporters.

Representatives from France, Brazil, Nigeria and the Philippines – who have citizens facing execution at the same time as Sukumaran and Chan – were also present.

Australia’s prime minister, Tony Abbott, and foreign minister, Julie Bishop, earlier said they were continuing to make representations at the highest levels in a bid to save the pair.


http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...air-to-be-transferred-this-week-for-execution

:snoop: this is murder
 
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Bali Nine: Australians will not be executed this month, says official
Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran’s transfer postponed because prison at Nusa Kambangan where execution was due to be carried out is not ready



Indonesia’s prison on Nusa Kambangan, where Australians Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan were expected to be transferred this week for execution by firing squad. Photograph: Darma Semito/EPA
Kate Lamb in Jakarta and Merran Hitchick in Sydney and agencies

Tuesday 17 February 2015 23.36 AEST Last modified on Wednesday 18 February 2015 07.59 AEST



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Convicted Australian drug smugglers Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan will not be moved from their Bali prison for execution this week, Indonesian authorities say, and it is unlikely executions will take place this month.

A spokesman for Indonesia’s attorney general said the prisoners’ transfer had been delayed because the prison at Nusa Kambangan, where they will be executed, is not yet ready.

Spokesman Tony Spontana said: “I cannot be sure how many days it will take to finish this preparation but I can guarantee the executions will not take place this month, if there are no extraordinary changes.”

Spontana also said the Australian government had asked for Chan and Sukumaran to have more time to spend with their families.

“I’m sure this week there won’t be any transfers,” he told reporters in Jakarta on Tuesday.

A team from the attorney general’s department had inspected Nusa Kambangan and found issues that must be resolved before moving the prisoners, Spontana said.

Problems had arisen because of the plan to execute more than five people there. “The space for the executions and the isolation cells will need some adjustments,” he said.

Spontana said there were already five prisoners in the space reserved and on seeing this, the team realised no others would fit.

“We will immediately develop this facility to make it broader,” he said. “It will take time because the breadth is five metres right now. The execution site right now is also only technically suitable for five people.”

He said adjustments would have to be made or an alternative place found.

Spontana also indicated that Brazilian national Rodrigo Gularte, who is on death row for a drug offence, would not be executed while questions remain about the state of his mental health.

“We have also received letters from the head of the Nusa Kambangan prison about one of the inmates showing indications of mental illness. He has already asked the attorney general’s office to have Mr Gularte checked at a hospital outside the prison because there are limited medical facilities at the prison,” he said.

“We have to make sure he is fully recovered before the execution.”


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Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan. Photograph: Antara Foto/Reuters
No date has been announced for the executions, which will also include prisoners from France, Nigeria and the Philippines.

Kerobokan prison governor Sudjonggo told reporters on Tuesday afternoon he had no knowledge of a postponement to the transfers. “I haven’t received any notification of that,” he said.

At Kerobokan prison on Tuesday, Sukumaran’s sister, Brintha, and other family members removed several large bags of books, mostly on art and painting.

Sukumaran’s friend, the artist Ben Quilty, wrote on his Facebook page: “Myu is clearing out his studio today. And my heart is broken.”

Officials said on Monday that the pair would be transferred this week. Lawyers for Chan and Sukumaran had said they should not be moved to the prison where the execution would take place while the legal process continued.

The lawyers said they had new indications their last-ditch legal appeal was moving forward. They are appealing against the decision not to grant clemency made by the president, Joko Widodo, on the basis that Indonesia was facing a “drug emergency”.

Speaking to reporters in Jakarta on Monday afternoon, Lubis said the legal team had been summoned to a meeting with the head of the administrative court next week.

“This is prima facie evidence that the legal process is still ongoing,” Lubis said. “I hope this legal process will be respected by the attorney general and all parts of the government.

“So they cannot move them, not to mention execute them, while the legal process is still going on.” But the attorney general made no mention of any link between the appeals and the delay.

On Tuesday afternoon Indonesia’s foreign minister, Retno Marsudi, stressed that the application of the death penalty is in accordance with due process.

“The death penalty is part of the law of Indonesia,” she said. “It is implemented as a last resort for the most serious of crimes. The decision is taken by our judicial system, which is independent and impartial.

“In the application of the death penalty Indonesia has ensured that due process of law is fully adhered to and that all credible legal avenues are undertaken in accordance with the Indonesian legal system.

“The decision to enforce the death penalty is not directed to a particular country.”

Marsudi also said that Indonesia’s fight against drugs had entered a “critical stage” and that drugs had “ruined the lives of many hardworking Indonesians”.

On bilateral issues with Australia, Marsudi stressed Indonesia’s sovereignty and said the case in hand was a legal, rather than political situation.

“Although we understand the position of the Australian government, it should be underlined that this issue is purely a law enforcement issue, law enforcement against an extraordinary crime.”

The Australian foreign affairs minister, Julie Bishop, told the ABC: “Any delay in plans by the Indonesian authorities to execute Mr Chan and Mr Sukumaran will be a relief to the men and their families and I certainly welcome the decision delay it.

“It gives us an opportunity to continue to engage on the best way forward with the Indonesian authorities so we will continue our representations at the highest level across the Indonesian government.”

Quilty is organising a vigil for Myuran in Sydney on Wednesday night. The event, at the Sukumarans’ church in Sydney’s west will feature speakers such as radio host Alan Jones. Chaser member Craig Reucassel will act as MC.

Eddie Perfect is hosting a similiar event organised by the artist Matthew Sleeth in Melbourne. Justice Lex Lasry will speak at the Federation Square event and Missy Higgins will perform music. Representatives of the Chan and Sukumaran families will attend.

An event is also being planned in Perth on Wednesday night.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...eral-postpones-transfer-for-execution-reports
 

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Tony Abbott: Indonesia should reciprocate for tsunami aid by sparing Bali Nine pair
Prime minister says clemency for Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran would be a fair response to Australia’s $1bn tsunami assistance



An Australian soldier helps clear tsunami wreckage in February 2005. Photograph: Dita Alangkara/AP
Daniel Hurst, political correspondent


@danielhurstbne

Wednesday 18 February 2015 10.16 AEST



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Tony Abbott has called on Indonesia to “reciprocate” for Australia’s $1bn aid package after the 2004 tsunami by sparing two citizens on death row for drug smuggling.

The prime minister strengthened his public calls for clemency for Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran with a warning on Wednesday that Australia would “feel grievously let down” and would “make our displeasure known” if Indonesia proceeded with the executions.

“Let’s not forget that a few years ago when Indonesia was struck by the Indian Ocean tsunami Australia sent a billion dollars worth of assistance, we sent a significant contingent of our armed forces to help in Indonesia with humanitarian relief and Australians lost their lives in that campaign to help Indonesia.

“I would say to the Indonesian people and the Indonesian government: we in Australia are always there to help you and we hope that you might reciprocate in this way at this time.”

Indonesian authorities announced on Tuesday that they were delaying the planned transfer of the pair to Nusa Kambangan and the executions were unlikely to occur this month.

Indonesia’s foreign minister, Retno Marsudi, said the government understood Australia’s position but “it should be underlined that this issue is purely a law enforcement issue, law enforcement against an extraordinary crime”.

Abbott said the delay was “an encouraging sign” and he hoped Indonesia “realised that its own best values and its own best interests are served by not going ahead with these executions”.

Asked about the potential consequences of the executions, Abbott said: “We will be letting Indonesia know in absolutely unambiguous terms that we feel grievously let down.”

He said he did not want to “prejudice the best possible relations with a very important friend and neighbour but I’ve got to say that we can’t just ignore this kind of thing if the perfectly reasonable representations we are making to Indonesia are ignored by them”.

“We are doing no more for our citizens than Indonesia routinely does for its own citizens and if it’s right and proper for Indonesia to make these representations, if it’s right and proper for other countries to heed Indonesia’s representations, it’s right and proper for us to make the representations and for them to be heeded,” he said.

Abbott said Chan and Sukumaran – who were part of the Bali Nine group that sought to smuggle heroin from Indonesia to Australia – deserved a long time in jail but they did not deserve to die.

“In fact, they have become, it seems, thoroughly reformed characters in prison in Bali and they are now helping the Indonesian fight against drug crime, so much better to use these people for good than to kill them,” Abbott said.

Marsudi said on Tuesday the application of the death penalty was part of the law of Indonesia and “implemented as a last resort for the most serious of crimes” and “not directed to a particular country”.

The Australian foreign affairs minister, Julie Bishop, welcomed the decision to delay the transfers of Chan and Sukumaran.

“Any delay in plans by the Indonesian authorities to execute Mr Chan and Mr Sukumaran will be a relief to the men and their families,” Bishop told the ABC on Wednesday.

“It gives us an opportunity to continue to engage on the best way forward with the Indonesian authorities so we will continue our representations at the highest level across the Indonesian government.”

The opposition leader, Bill Shorten, said the delay provided “a modest opportunity for people to engage in constructive suggestions and discussion” aimed at preventing the executions.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...eciprocate-tsunami-aid-sparing-bali-nine-pair
 
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