Nine face midnight firing squad in Indonesia, hopes for reprieve gone
https://kabar22.blogspot.com/2015/04/nine-face-midnight-firing-squad-in.html
CILACAP, BLOKBERITA -- Nine drug traffickers held emotional farewell meetings with
their families at an Indonesian prison on Tuesday, after Jakarta
rejected last-ditch pleas from around the world for clemency and ordered
their mass execution to proceed within hours.
"I won't see him again," said Raji Sukumaran, the mother
of an Australian who will go before a firing squad along with a fellow
countryman and convicts from Nigeria, Brazil, the Philippines and
Indonesia.
"They're going to take him at midnight and shoot him. I'm asking the
government not to kill him. Please don't kill him today," she told
reporters, weeping as she spoke.
The death penalties have been condemned by the United Nations, and strained ties between Australia and Indonesia.
Security at
the high-security prison on an island off the Central Java coast was
heightened on Tuesday. Religious counselors, doctors and the firing
squad were alerted to start final preparations for the execution, and a
dozen ambulances, some carrying white satin-covered coffins, were seen
arriving.
Amid
chaotic scenes outside the jail, a member of one of the Australian's
family collapsed and was carried through the crowd.
"I saw today something that no other family should ever
have to go through. Nine families inside a prison saying goodbye to
their loved ones," said Chan's brother, Michael. "It's torture."
TWELVE MARKSMEN FOR EACH PRISONER
Indonesian authorities have declined to specify a time for
the executions, which are due to take place at a nearby clearing in a
forest, but the last time a group of drug traffickers were executed
earlier this year it was carried out at midnight.
The
prisoners will be given the choice to stand, kneel or sit before the
firing squad, and to be blindfolded. Their hands and feet will be tied.
Twelve marksmen are assigned to fire at the heart of each
prisoner, but only three have live ammunition. Authorities say this is
so that the executioner remains unidentified.
"She does present an opportunity right now to be able to uncover all the
participants and start the process of bringing them to the bars of
justice," Aquino told reporters in Malaysia, where he was attending a
meeting of Southeast Asian leaders.
Veloso's lawyers filed a human trafficking complaint recently against another Filipina, Maria Cristina Sergio, who they allege promised the death-row inmate a job as a domestic worker in Indonesia but instead led her to become a drug mule.
Sergio voluntarily surrendered to police in the
Philippines on Tuesday, seeking protection after receiving death threats
via her social media accounts and mobile phone.
"Now she says she's a victim of human trafficking. I think these are just efforts to delay the execution. We have given her all legal avenues. Don't force us to change. If we're not firm, it means we're weak in the war against drugs."
Filipino boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao, who is in the United States for a title fight, made a televised appeal to Indonesian President Joko Widodo on behalf of his countrywoman, Veloso: "I am begging and knocking on your kind heart that your excellency will grant executive clemency to her."
AUSTRALIA: "THERE WILL BE CONSEQUENCES"
Authorities on Monday granted Australian Chan's last wish, which was to marry his Indonesian girlfriend at the prison. But they rebuffed last-minute appeals from Australia to save the lives of Sukumaran and Chan, who were arrested in 2005 as the ringleaders of a plot to smuggle heroin out of Indonesia.
The pending executions have strained Indonesia's relations with Australia, Nigeria and Brazil, which will likely worsen after the death sentences are carried out.
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop told ABC television: "Should these executions proceed in the manner that I anticipate, of course, there will have to be consequences."
Australia-Indonesia relations have been tested in recent years by disputes over people smuggling and spying. In late 2013 Indonesia recalled its envoy and froze military and intelligence cooperation over reports that Canberra had spied on top Indonesian officials, including the former president's wife.
Indonesia has harsh punishments for drug crimes and
resumed executions in 2013 after a five-year gap. Six have been executed
so far this year.
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