Monday 6 April 2015

LATEST NEWS!! Bali Nine Australians' death row appeal fails

Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, pictured in 2006
Two Australian drug smugglers sentenced to death cannot challenge the president's decision to refuse them clemency, an Indonesian court has ruled.

Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran were the leaders of the "Bali Nine" group of heroin smugglers arrested in 2005.
They are among 10 foreign drug offenders scheduled to be executed soon in Indonesia.
Australia has campaigned strongly for their sentences to be commuted.
Both men were appealing against an earlier ruling which had barred them from challenging Indonesian President Joko Widodo's rejection of their clemency pleas.
But the State Administrative Court in Jakarta upheld that decision, saying it had no authority to take the case.
Mr Widodo, who took office last year, has been taking a tough stance on drug crime.
In January he authorised the executions of six people, including five foreigners, convicted of drug offences.
The two Australians are in a second group, of 10 people, to be put to death. But no date has been set for the executions.
Indonesian authorities say they are waiting for all legal avenues be exhausted in all of the convicts' cases before the group are executed.
line
Who are the Bali Nine?
  • The eight men and one woman were arrested in April 2005 at an airport and hotel in Bali, Indonesia after a tip-off from Australian police. They were trying to carry 8.3kg (18lb) of heroin back to Australia
  • In 2006 a court ruled that Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran had recruited the others and paid their costs. They were sentenced to death
  • The other seven are serving sentences of between 20 years and life, after some had death sentences revoked on appeal
  • Chan and Sukumaran have repeatedly appealed against their sentences and say they are reformed characters - Chan teaches Bible and cookery classes in prison while Sukumaran is an artist

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