An Australian drug smuggler on death row in Indonesia has lost a bid for presidential clemency, his final chance to avoid execution, a court official said yesterday.
Myuran Sukumaran was one of nine Australians arrested in 2005 for attempting to smuggle 8kg of heroin out of the Indonesian island of Bali.
“The presidential decree signed on Dec. 30 stipulates that the clemency of an Australian on death row, Myuran Sukumaran, has been rejected,” said Hasoloan Sianturi, a spokesman for the court in Bali which has jurisdiction over the case.
Sukumaran and another member of the so-called “Bali Nine” who was sentenced to death, Andrew Chan, lodged appeals for presidential clemency after their final court appeals were rejected in 2011.
“After careful consideration on clemency request ... there is not enough reason to grant a clemency,” a copy of the presidential decree for Sukumaran given to Agence France-Presse showed.
Sianturi said the court received the presidential decision on Wednesday, but there was no information available on Chan’s appeal.
The other seven members of the “Bali Nine” were given life sentences. One of them later had her sentenced reduced to 20 years. Indonesia enforces some of the world’s toughest punishments for narcotics offenses and there is strong public support for executing drug traffickers.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo pledged last month, shortly after taking office, that there would be no pardons for drug traffickers on death row, including foreigners.
Executions in Indonesia are usually carried out by firing squad.
Five more foreigners, from Hong Kong and Malaysia, were arrested this week as they allegedly tried to smuggle 860kg of crystal methamphetamines through a port near Jakarta.
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