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Aboriginal Woman Sentenced To 8 Years Jail In Bolivia

bit_pattern

Ex-Bluelighter
Joined
Oct 17, 2008
Messages
8,128
Can you imagine the media circus in Australia if this was a young white woman being sentenced? 8)

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Aboriginal Woman Sentenced To 8 Years Jail In Bolivia
By Max Chalmers

Australian media can't get enough of Schapelle Corby, but it seems they're not so interested in Alana Miles. Max Chalmers reports.

A young Aboriginal woman has been sentenced to eight years prison in Bolivia, finally convicted after facing allegations of cocaine importation while serving a lengthy period of detention without charge.

Queensland woman Alana Miles was arrested in March 2013 after being arrested at a Bolivian airport with a backpack containing cocaine.

Miles claimed she had been given the backpack by a friend, and was not aware of its contents.

Despite the similarities between Miles’ circumstances and those of other high profile Australians such as Schapelle Corby, Miles’ story has received little media attention.

Since her arrest, Miles’ family have been running fundraising to provide their daughter with basic necessities they say are not provided free to inmates.

In a Facebook message posed in a support group in May, sister Kylie Miles said Alana was forced to spend $125 a week in order to gain access to basic provisions and insulin, necessary to help manage her diabetes.

“Alana is looking at a sentence which will be a massive impact on our whole family. Her presence is sadly missed everyday,” Kylie Miles wrote at the time.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade confirmed Consul officials were in regular contact with the family, and with Miles.

“The Australian Embassy in Lima and the Australian Honorary Consul in La Paz, Bolivia are providing consular assistance to an Australian woman who has been sentenced in Bolivia to eight years’ imprisonment for serious narcotics offences,” DFAT said in a statement provided to New Matilda

During Alana’s time held in custody, Kylie told media outlets she was surprised by the lack of attention given to the case, and protested her sister’s innocence.

“My sister would not even know what cocaine looked like except for in the movies,” Kylie told the Brisbane Times.

She told the outlet her sister had fought Leukaemia as a child.

“After all she went through in her teenage years she just wanted to travel,” she said.

New Matilda is seeking to make contact with the Miles family, and will have a new story as soon as possible.
 
I dont think the race thing has that much to do with it really, Bali is alot closer than Bolivia and 10 years for cannabis and 8 yrs for coke.

Also this woman is white and she didn't get that much media attention either -

How a convicted drug smuggler survives a foreign jail in the shadow of Schapelle Corby

art-Atherton-620x349.jpg


A young Australian woman with HIV is quietly serving out a jail sentence for cocaine smuggling in Lima, Peru, without the media frenzy that has surrounded her more prominent compatriot.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/how-a-c...pelle-corby-20140215-32smb.html#ixzz37JQ3gHpW

She's a young Australian woman who has been held in a foreign jail for years after a drug smuggling conviction. But she is not the woman you're thinking of.
Bronwyn Atherton has been in jail in Lima, Peru, since 2008 - when she was caught trying to smuggle a suitcase containing 18 kilograms of cocaine onto a flight to Paris.
Unlike her infamous compatriot Schapelle Corby, however, Atherton's story is largely unknown to her fellow Australians.
When I visit her at the Santa Monica prison in the suburb of Chorrillos in Lima, she seems completely lacking in bitterness.
Advertisement
Outside a cafe in the jail's visiting area - which has trees and stalls selling stuffed toys and half decent food - she explains how a 28-year-old woman from Cowra in the NSW central west wound up here.


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/how-a-c...pelle-corby-20140215-32smb.html#ixzz37JQ8Rx5z


We have chatted about this before tho. I do agree it sux, but what can you do. This has happened to many people over time, of all sorts of colour and nationalities and religions.
 
Alana Miles was obviously used as an unknowing mule. I feel really sorry for her and her family and friends, what a bad situation, especially being diabetic. That article I mentioned above about Bronwyn, she is HIV positive tho. It's just a real shame all around.
 
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alana_miles_nitv.jpg


Brisbane woman Alana Miles was arrested at Santa Cruz airport in March 2013 after she was found with a backpack containing cocaine.

She has been held in Bolivia's Santa Cruz prison since that time and only sentenced this week for the crime. It was not clear when she was charged.

Upon arrest, Miles denied knowledge of the bag's contents.

Sister Kylie Miles told NITV the family was relieved to finally have an outcome.

"At least we know now and we’re able to sleep better," she said.

"In the first instance it was just relief because we didn't know before, and there's so much more we don’t know but at least we've got something that's solid."

Kylie told NITV her sister had been advised to plead guilty to increase her chances of a pardon.

"Now what we’re waiting for is the papers to be sent for her sentencing and then she can apply for a pardon," she said.

But she said the plea had not been an admission of guilt.

"She pled guilty to get home, most definitely."

When asked why she thought Australian media had taken little interest in her sister's case, she was unsure.

"It's a bit of a mystery to me," she said. "Considering Schapelle's story was about drugs and the Bail Nine about drugs. I don't see any difference, other than it's not Bali."

In a statement, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade says the Australian Embassy in Lima and the Australian Honorary Consul in La Paz, Bolivia were providing consular assistance to Ms Miles and were also in regular communication with the woman's family.

http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2014/07/11/australian-sentenced-8-years-bolivian-prison-drugs
 
“After all she went through in her teenage years she just wanted to travel."
She said Alana's online friend had contacted the 24-year-old while she was on holiday in Malaysia, and offered to help pay for flights to visit Bolivia.
She said the friend also provided a bag to Alana which appeared brand new with tags attached.
The same bag was later allegedly found to contain bricks of cocaine, wrapped in foam and sewn into the lining.
Ms Miles said Bolivian authorities had not been able to locate the friend - known only by his nickname - since Alana’s arrest.


Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/que...take-notice-20140221-3369u.html#ixzz37JT3TRSW

It sux, but you can't really trust anyone, especially someone who you met online, who pays for your flights and gives you a new suitcase to travel with. That should ring alarm bells, but I understand there are many naive people.
 
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