Bali Nine Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran to be executed together in Bal

“Execution, death, the only way to stop narcotics,” one banner read.

Yep, killing people for supplying a product that people want because you believe this product kills a disproportionate number of people, which it doesnt. Yet more Indonesians die of tobacco related illness than illegal drugs.

How can people not see that the war on drugs is a complete and utter failure and a new approach has to be taken. Possibly because the war on drugs generate billions not only for the ones selling them, but also the ones fighting against them?

These 2 men are about to be murdered, taken out and strapped to a board, given 3 minutes to "compose" themselves, then shot in the heart with 3 bullets. Their lives have been extinguished in the blink of an eye
 
Bali Nine families turned away from seeing Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran amid protests at jail

BALI Nine member Scott Rush, whose death sentence was overturned, has spoken about the pending executions of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran.
Rush, 29, told The Weekend Australian through a friend that he is “shocked and heartbroken” by the imminent executions.
“I am praying for Myuran and Andrew and for the other condemned prisoners that even at this time mercy can’t be shown. I send love and prayers to the families and loved ones. May God bless them all,’’ he reportedly said.

Rush had his death sentence changed to life in prison but he hopes that may be changed to a 20-year term.
Rush’s father, Lee, helped police nab the Bali Nine after he asked a lawyer and family friend, Bob Myers, to contact the Australia Federal Police when he became suspicious that his son was smuggling drugs.
One of Scott Rush’s legal team, Robert Welfare, said while his client was saddened by Chan and Sukumaran’s imminent death any reports that he was feeling guilty were “ill founded”.

It comes as Chan and Sukumaran’s families were denied access to the island jail where they are on death row.
As outrage builds over Indonesia’s “undignified” treatment of the Australians, the pair were held in isolation cells in Besi jail on Nusakambangan while their distressed families bunkered down in a hotel a ferry ride away in Cilacap.

Cont -

http://www.news.com.au/world/asia/b...protests-at-jail/story-fnh81fz8-1227251850178
 
12 year old girl writes incredibly powerful letter about the bali nine

Jessica Larter is only 12-years-old, but has this message for the Indonesian President.

Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan are set to be executed, and a year 7 student has penned a letter to Indonesian President Joko Widodo asking him to spare their lives.

In the powerful letter, Jessica says that the two men have been helping others turn away from drugs.

She also writes about how the perception of Indonesia would possibly be transformed by stopping the execution.

bali-9-jessica-letter.jpg


cont- http://www.2dayfm.com.au/scoopla/life/blog/2015/2/12-year-old-girl-writes-incredibly-powerful-letter-about-the-bali-nine/

...kytnism...:|
 
The public sentiment is too strong for Widodo to back down at this point. It's become a matter of national pride for Indonesia to be able to execute these men. Fucked up situation. Those smiling pictures on the plane the prison officials took with the condemned men made me sick to my stomach. This bunch of bloodthirsty cunts are enjoying this.
 
Bali Nine executions: Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran in agonising wait

Myuran Sukumaran wants to know when he can start painting again.

After four days in quarantine or holding cells at Nusa Kambangan the young Australian is said to be desperate to get back to the passion he has held for the past five years.
Since the shock of their dramatic transfer from Bali to Java the duo have now had two consular and legal visits but must wait until Monday to see their families for the first time.

Lawyer Julian McMahon and Australian Consulate to Bali, Majell Hind, visited Chan and Sukumaran for the second time. On Friday the pair spent four hours with them.
The pair and their families now face a further agonising wait after the Attorney General’s spokesman said on Friday the executions would now be delayed so that all legal appeals currently underway can be finalised. He also suggested the executions may not occur until next month.

The shift in rhetoric, to wait for the legal processes to finish, is a step back from comments earlier in the week that the legal appeals made no difference and the executions would go ahead regardless.
“I’m pleased to hear it, so let’s wait for the legal processes, that’s how it should be,” the men’s Indonesian lawyer, Todung Mulya Lubis said.

Chan and Sukumaran have an appeal hearing in Jakarta next Thursday and the Judicial Commission is also investigating a complaint the Judges who sentenced them to death asked for a bribe for a lighter sentence.
In Cilacap, the town closest to the island jail where the Australian heroin traffickers are held, their families wait at a hotel for their first visit after rushing to the port town in the aftermath of their transfer.

Sukumaran’s mother Raji is desperate to hold her son and tell him of her pride in him and how she wishes so much she could take his pain away.
“I am really desperate to see Myu, we are hoping it will be soon,” Mrs Sukumaran told News Corp Australia.
“I want to hold him and make sure he knows I am proud of him, that I love him and that I wish I could take the pain away,” she said.
Helen Chan is the same. She just wants to see her son.

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The pair are being held in block of four holding cells in Besi prison, one of seven prisons on the island, along with a Nigerian death row prisoner who was transferred the same day.
The cells are known as quarantine cells, used for new prisoners to the jail, where are placed there until they are assigned a permanent cell.
They are not the isolation cells, newly-built to isolate the prisoners for 72 hours before their execution and the men are not in isolation.

News Corp Australia understands that the jail governor has indicated that Sukumaran will be allowed to have his paints and begin painting again as soon as the quarantine period is finished but does not know how long that will be.
It is understood that Sukumaran has already been allowed to have the sketchbook and pencils he brought with him from Bali.
The pair are in a block of four cells — in a single cell each.

Nigerian Raheem Agbaje Salami is next to them. The three cannot see each other but can talk by calling out and are said to be giving each other support and encouragement.
The cells have a bed and an Indonesian style bathroom each. It is understood that one of their meals since arriving consisted of fried chicken and rice.
They are said to be in “good spirits”.

cont: http://www.news.com.au/world/asia/bali-nine-executions-andrew-chan-and-myuran-sukumaran-in-agonising-wait/story-fnh81fz8-1227253061372

...kytnism...:|
 
The public sentiment is too strong for Widodo to back down at this point. It's become a matter of national pride for Indonesia to be able to execute these men. Fucked up situation. Those smiling pictures on the plane the prison officials took with the condemned men made me sick to my stomach.

you and i both. and the fact that the official posing in the photograph had the ordacity to state "i had no idea a photograph was being taken. my hand was placed on mr chans shoulder as i said to him "be strong, have faith. its not over yet" simply adds insult to injury. its no mistake that hes staring down the lens of the camera and posing himself in a manner one would as a photograph is being taken. the whole ordeal regarding that matter is disgusting (for lack of a better term) and intolerable. neither men deserved to be treated that way.

...kytnism...:|
 
Indonesian president open to abolishing death penalty

Indonesia's president revealed in an interview that he would abolish the death penalty if the country's citizens willed him to.

In an interview with Al Jazeera set to air today, President Joko Widodo said he did not consider nationality — nor the intervention of their governments — when weighing-up appeals for mercy.

When asked about impending executions and his ability to intervene, Widodo said "as a human being I feel it too" but countered he also felt the "suffering of those parents whose children are addicted to drugs".

"When I rejected clemency I took into consideration how many drugs they smuggled, how many pills they distributed," Widodo said.

"The court has sentenced them and we cannot discriminate between countries."

The president also stated he would be open to removing the death penalty from Indonesian law, but that decision was up to the people.

"The constitution and the existing law still allows the death penalty. But, if the Indonesian people want to change it in the future, then it's possible, why not?"

Widodo also said that as the head of state it was his "obligation" to protect his citizens from facing the death penalty overseas and he would lobby foreign governments to bring them home.

It comes as condemned Bali Nine duo Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran will be able to pursue a new legal appeal after being granted a new hearing before a Jakarta court set for this Thursday.

Chan and Sukumaran will head back to the courts after the Indonesian Attorney-General HM Prasetyo made the decision yesterday to postpone the pair's execution, possibly beyond this month.

The new appeal will challenge President Widodo's rejection of all requests to grant clemency, making the argument he did not give proper consideration of the requests as stated by Indonesia's Clemency Act, Fairfax reports.

It will be Chan and Sukumaran's second attempt at challenging their clemency rejection after their first failed with a state administrative court ruling it did not have authority over presidential decisions.

Indonesian clemency laws declare the president must decide on whether to grant mercy "after thoroughly considering the clemency application".

Lawyers for the two convicted Australian drug traffickers will argue this was not done, pegging it to comments made by Widodo in December last year that he would reject all condemned drug smugglers' mercy requests.

"The clemency requests are not on my table yet. But I guarantee that there will be no clemency for convicts who committed narcotics-related crimes," he told an audience at Yogyakarta's Gadjah Mada University on December 9.

Fairfax reports the president made a blanket decision not to approve any application for clemency after a cursory examination of a list containing 64 names. All were rejected, with six already having been executed on January 18.

Chan and Sukumaran are currently awaiting their fate on Nusakambangan, a penal island where executions are carried out.

They were convicted in 2005 of organising to smuggle 8kg of heroin from Bali into Australia.


Read more at http://www.9news.com.au/world/2015/...lishing-the-death-penalty#JlZzvQSHbRvVOulo.99
 
Joko Widodo says abolishing death penalty possible, but not for a 'long time'

Joko Widodo says abolishing death penalty possible, but not for a 'long time'

Cilacap: Indonesia's president Joko Widodo says he is open to abolishing the death penalty, but not for a "long time" and only if the Indonesian people want it.

Mr Joko made the remarks in an interview with Al Jazeera but otherwise defended his plans to kill drug traffickers, including the Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran.

"The Constitution and existing laws still allow [the death penalty] but in the future if it is necessary to change it and [if] the people really want it, why not?" he said in the interview, broadcast in full on Saturday.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo.

"I think we want to listen to what people want first. It's still a long time to go through and I do not want to talk about the issue now."

Indonesian diplomats reportedly told a United Nations seminar in Geneva that a moratorium was possible in the future. However, its foreign minister Retno Marudi later denied this had happened.

Polls show strong support for the death penalty in Indonesia, with approval running at 70 per cent or higher.

However, Indonesia halted executions for more than four years during the presidency of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, helping it save some 200 of its own citizens on death row overseas during that period.

In rejecting the clemency appeals of the Bali nine drug offenders and others on death row, Mr Joko said he considered the amount of drugs that had been distributed.

"When I rejected clemency I took into consideration how many drugs they smuggled, how many pills they distributed.... The court has sentenced them and we cannot discriminate between countries."

The Bali nine smuggling ring was bringing 8.3 kilos of heroin to Australia, not Indonesia.

Another condemned man slated to be executed alongside the Australian pair, Ghanaian Martin Anderson (alias Belo), was caught with just 50 grams of heroin in 2003.

Mr Joko said the country was facing a drugs "emergency".

He said there were 4.5 million people in drug rehabilitation programs and "at least 1.5 million people who cannot be cured".

"This is the picture of Indonesia's future, our next generation. We want to send a strong message to drug smugglers that Indonesia is firm and serious in tackling the drug problem and one of the consequences is execution," he said.

"Most importantly, our diplomats can explain to other countries the urgency of our drug problem in Indonesia. Explain to them about the conditions here, that drugs are entering villages, ruining our young ones, are being sold at campuses. Even universities have drug problems. This is an emergency."

Of those to be killed alongside Chan and Sukumaran, nine are foreigners. The mass executions have sparked diplomatic protests from Australia, France, Nigeria and the Philippines.

On Friday, Indonesia's attorney-general announced a delay in the executions as legal appeals were heard and preparations finalised at Nusakambangan, the penal island where the executions are to take place.

At least five the 10 condemned have legal appeals in the works. Chan and Sukumaran's appeal to the state administrative court will be heard in Jakarta on Thursday.

It will be their second attempt to challenge the rejection of their clemency petition by Mr Joko. The first challenge failed after the same court determined it had no jurisdiction over presidential decrees.

Indonesia's judicial commission is also investigating allegations that the judges who sentenced them to death asked for bribes in exchange for a more lenient sentence.

http://www.smh.com.au/world/joko-wi...-but-not-for-a-long-time-20150308-13y6ve.html
 
Indonesia got its own citizens off death row but Aussie Bali Nine duo still await execution

INDONESIA’S world class hypocrisy over the death penalty has been laid bare in statistics that reveal it fought for and won execution reprieves for nearly 200 of its own citizens.

As Bali 9 drug smugglers Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran await execution on the prison island of Nusakambangan, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has warned that the plan to proceed with executions at home could risk the lives of citizens facing the death penalty overseas.

While the Indonesian Government is still refusing to commute the death sentences of Australians, The Sunday Telegraph can reveal that 189 Indonesians had their own death sentences commuted in the last three years alone.

Some experts estimate there are 360 Indonesians facing the death penalty overseas including vulnerable migrant workers in the Middle East.

The Indonesians who had faced execution but had their death sentences suspended were convicted of crimes including drug smuggling in Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, China, Iran, Singapore.

“I am not requesting of Indonesia anything that Indonesia does not request of other nations where Indonesian citizens face the death penalty,’’ Ms Bishop told The Sunday Telegraph.

“Indonesia has sought and has received from other nations stays of execution for Indonesian citizens on death row, including for drug offences.

“I welcome the fact that Indonesia opposes the death penalty for its citizens abroad and that’s why the Australian Government is seeking the same mercy for Mr Sukumaran and Mr Chan.’’

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ne...-await-execution/story-fni0cx12-1227252877434
 
PM waiting for 'final call' with President Widodo over Bali Nine fate

Prime Minister Tony Abbott is still waiting for a "final call" with Indonesia's president over the fate of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran.

The prime minister last week revealed he had asked to speak to Joko Widodo after the Australians were transferred to the Nusakambangan prison island for execution.

Mr Abbott said today he had already had several conversations with the Indonesian leader.

"I've requested another one. At this stage, it hasn't been able to be arranged," he told reporters in Sydney.

In an interview with broadcaster Al Jazeera on Saturday, Mr Widodo defended his decision to allow the executions, which have sparked diplomatic tensions with Canberra.

However, he said the government would be open to abolishing the death penalty if the Indonesian people wanted change.

"The constitution and existing laws still allow (the death penalty) but in the future if it is necessary to change it and the people really want it, why not?" he said.

Chan and Sukumaran were due to be executed as early as this weekend but Indonesia says it will now wait for the legal appeals of the Bali Nine duo and other death-row inmates, meaning they could be on Nusakambangan for weeks.


Read more at http://www.9news.com.au/national/20...l-yet-with-widodo-says-pm#0oDYoR7lQ4pblksv.99
 
Bali Nine duo Andrew Chan, Myuran Sukumaran wait for execution date

ONE of the men set to be executed alongside Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran has already written his list of final requests — that his death be the last execution in Indonesia.
And in the letter obtained by News Corp Australia he decries a system where the real drug dealers go free and get light sentences because they have the money to pay bribes while poor people like himself get the death penalty.

In addition the revelation that another of the 10 slated for execution has had his application for a judicial review of his case pending and unanswered for the past 10 years shows the shambolic nature of the clemency and execution system. Two of the others slated for execution had also not had a judicial review yet and were to be executed without being allowed to exercise all their legal rights.

Indonesian man Zainal Abidin first applied for a judicial review in 2005 but after an initial hearing was never given any result or verdict. After his clemency was denied this year and he was added to the execution list his lawyers sought to find out why he had not received any judicial review verdict and were told that his file had only been sent to the Supreme Court for adjudication on February 15 this year.
It comes as Prime Minister Tony Abbott continues to be snubbed by Indonesian President Joko Widodo over his last minute plea for the Bali Nine pair to avoid the firing squad.
Mr Abbott yesterday confirmed his request on Wednesday to speak directly to the Indonesian President about the pair had yet to be met.
“At this stage that hasn’t been able to be arranged,” Mr Abbott said.

Cont -

http://www.news.com.au/national/bal...r-execution-date/story-fncynjr2-1227254105762
 
‘What does it take to get a second chance?’: Bali Nine death row inmate Andrew Chan filmed reflecting on life

Click link for video -

Harrowing footage has emerged of Bali Nine death row inmate Andrew Chan asking what it takes “to get a second chance”.

“My name’s Andrew Chan,” he said to the camera.

“It’s a day - pretty much a few hours- after the execution of six innocent lives.

“Guess what runs through my head is about how precious life really is.”

The footage is understood to have been shot in Kerobokan prison on January 18 this year. It aired on the Seven Network this evening.

On that day Indonesia executed six people by firing squad, all for drug crimes.

“I guess sometimes you kinda got to think, what does it take to get a second chance?” Chan said.

“People get second chances within their lives on the outside, but how much can you get when you’re a convicted criminal.”

Since the footage was filmed, Chan and fellow Bali Nine inmate Myuran Sukumaran have been transferred to a prison on the island Nusakambangan where they are set to be executed.

The pair are adjusting to the harsh new conditions on the island, away from their support networks built over a decade within the walls of Bali’s Kerobokan prison.

It was initially thought the executions would happen imminently, as Indonesian law only requires the pair to be given 72 hours notice of their impending deaths.

However, their executions have been postponed as Indonesian authorities have opted to allow the pair's legal appeals, and those of eight other death row prisoners on Nusakambangan, to be exhausted.

Their appeal against President Joko Widodo's refusal to grant them clemency is set to be heard in a Jakarta court on Thursday.

In an interview with broadcaster Al Jazeera on yesterday, Mr Widodo defended his decision to allow the executions, which have sparked diplomatic tensions with Canberra.

However, he said the government would be open to abolishing the death penalty if the Indonesian people wanted change.

http://www.9news.com.au/national/20...andrew-chan-bali-nine-death-row-inmate-filmed
 
Bali Nine ringleader Sukumaran tried to bargain for his life with police

AS Australian authorities, the families and supporters of condemned Bali Nine duo Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran try desperately to negotiate to save the pair from looming execution, it has emerged one of the ringleaders tried to strike a deal of his own.

Chan and Sukumaran were part of a drug syndicate instructing a team of Australian drug mules importing heroin into Indonesia. Dubbed the ringleaders of the operation, the pair was working for someone else — a king pin who is still at large.

Chan and Sukamaran never revealed the identity of the ‘Mr Big’ character who is believed to have escaped police detection by avoiding a “hands on” role in the drug syndicate.

While Chan maintains he doesn’t know the identity of the drug scheme’s boss, saying he answered to “a number of people”, Sukumaran has revealed he considered identifying the major player in exchange for protection from police.

In an interview with Seven’s Sunday Night, the drug smuggler-turned-artist and prison mentor revealed he had tried to made a deal with police.

He said he tried to bargain for his life, but was advised not to go through with spilling the beans on Mr Big.

“We tried with the police to get some sort of co-operation thing but there weren’t really, like that was our only card that we had to play,” he said.

“They wouldn’t, and then the lawyers advised us not to go that way.”

Sukumaran has conceded the pair was instructed by “a bunch of people, in Sydney”, but repeated he feared for his family if he dobbed in the real ringleaders.

Barrister Sam Di Carlo, who represented members of the Bali drugs syndicate, said evidence showed Sukumaran and Chan were low-level smugglers in a wider operation and “it’s quite clear [the police] never got the ring leaders.”

“My view is that certainly they didn’t get anywhere near the top of the ladder,” Mr Di Carlo told news.com.au last month, when reports surfaced that the real boss of the Bali Nine operation may have been living free and in luxury in Sydney, having won millions on the lottery.

THE DEAL AUSTRALIA TRIED TO STRIKE

Sukumaran’s deal clearly never eventuated, joining a similar doomed trade-off floated by the Australian government in a bid to save the pair.

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop last week proposed, in what was reportedly “a very tense phone call” to her Indonesian counterpart, to explore the transfer of Indonesian prisoners detained in Australia in exchange for Chan and Sukumaran.

The deal was to reportedly involve three Indonesians in prison in Australia over their role in an infamous 1998 drug bust.

They were named as Kristito Mandagi, Saud Siregar and Ismunandar, the captain, chief officer and engineer respectively of a boat carrying 390 kilograms of heroin that was seized near Port Macquarie, some 400 kilometres north of Sydney.

Cont -

http://www.news.com.au/national/bal...life-with-police/story-fncynjr2-1227255036900
 
I'm currently reading the book "Bali 9 - the Untold Story", Chan & Sukumuram have admitted doing the drug runs to Bali TWICE before getting caught the 3rd time.
 

at what point are you going cease condemning these two men, and kindred to their supporters; acknowledge that theyre well aware theyre in error and have served a ten year prison sentence so far for their drug related crime. what the hell more do you WANT from them?

they acknowledge that they were criminals, broke the law and have served their sentenced time respectfully. do you really need to witness two human men gunned down in murder to feel satisfied that law and justice have been served? for carrying 8kgs of heroin into australia that never even made it, seriously?

are you THAT small minded on the scope and scale of the war on drugs as a whole that youre unleashing your anger at now fully grown men that made stupid and irresponsible decisions while young, that NOW, ten years later could see them facing murder and separated from family and loved ones?

is your mental horizon really that narrow? if so, you really need to change it <3

...kytnism...:|
 
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Bali Nine executions 'will go ahead' - LATEST UPDATE



http://www.news.com.au/world/asia/f...-to-death-island/story-fnh81fz8-1227254795313

Megawati tells Joko Widodo not to grant clemency



http://www.smh.com.au/world/bali-ni...do-not-to-grant-clemency-20150309-13yw5a.html

Bali nine: Executions delay relates to just one case, which may be resolved this week

Indonesia is waiting on the outcome of a review of just the case of a Filipino migrant on death row - expected as early as this week...



http://www.smh.com.au/world/bali-ni...ay-be-resolved-this-week-20150309-13zgtd.html
 
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Bali Nine ringleader Andrew Chan proposes to girlfriend Febyanti after losing clemency bid

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AS HE waited under the shadow of death in Bali’s Kerobokan prison Andrew Chan made a decision to embrace the love of his life.

Shortly after learning his plea for clemency was rejectedby Indonesian President Joko Widodo in February, Chan, 31, asked for the hand of his girlfriend Febyanti as she visited him in jail.

Feby, as she is known, accepted immediately and has since worn a beautiful solitaire engagement ring.

“Andrew is one of the strongest, kindest people I have ever met,” Feby told News Corporation.

“I have never seen him as just a prisoner or someone who is on death row.”

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Feby said her love of Chan was not borne out of any kind of pity.

“I love him for who he is. And I see what he does for other people and that makes me love him more, “ Feby said.

“If you ask me why do I love him, it’s because he also has weaknesses as well but he also has a lot of good things about him. I accept him the way he is. I am also very proud of him.”

Chan and fellow Bali Nine death row inmate Myuran Sukumaran yesterday had their first visit from family since their transfer from Kerobokan last Wednesday, with each man’s mother and siblings spending the morning with them.

Cont -

http://www.news.com.au/national/bal...ing-clemency-bid/story-fncynjr2-1227255868084
 
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