Indonesia executes 1 citizen, 3 foreigners over drugs

Indonesia executes 1 citizen, 3 foreigners over drugs

Official says executions of 10 other drug smugglers to be held at later stage, without providing details

By Ainur Rohmah

TUBAN, Indonesia (AA) – Indonesia confirmed Friday the execution of one national and three foreigners convicted of drug smuggling, out of the 14 death row inmates expected to be brought before firing squads on a notorious island prison.

Deputy Attorney General Noor Rachmad told a press conference, "the first [executed] was [Indonesian] Freddy Budiman, then [Senegalese] Seck Osmane, [Nigerians] Michael Titus and Humphrey Ejike."

The remaining 10 death row inmates will be executed at a later stage, kompas.com quoted him as saying -- without providing details-- at Wijayapura Dock in Cilacap, the port city closest to Nusakambangan prison in Java.

Rachmad insisted that prosecutors had considered the convicts’ cases in depth before the executions, concluding their crimes had been grave and caused serious damage to others.

On Thursday, 14 coffins were seen being transported to Nusakambangan, with detik.com reporting Friday that five ambulances -- four of them carrying the bodies of the executed -- had left the island.

The body of Budiman, who authorities have accused of coordinating drug trafficking operations from behind bars, will be transported to his hometown of Surabaya in East Java for burial as he had requested.

The body of Ejike will be cremated, while those of Titus and Osmane will be returned to their home countries.

Among those expected to be executed were also nationals of India, Pakistan, Zimbabwe and Sierra Leone.

Amnesty International asked that the executions should not go ahead, saying the families were only informed of the decision Thursday morning -- contrary to Indonesian law and international standards.

Indonesian law requires that relatives be informed at least 72 hours in advance.

Rafendi Djamin, Amnesty International’s director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific, said that President Joko Widodo “should not become the most prolific executioner in recent Indonesian history”.

“He still has time to pull back from these unlawful executions, before inviting global notoriety.”

Indonesia has some of the harshest anti-narcotic laws in the world. Widodo declared a "drug emergency" last year, on the grounds that such use reportedly kills around 40-50 people in the country daily.

Last year’s executions were heavily criticized by the international community, with some countries -- whose nationals had been put to death -- withdrawing ambassadors from Jakarta.

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