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Southeast Asia
Bali bombers denied request to be beheaded
2007-12-28
THE three Bali bombers on death row will be denied their request to be executed by beheading and will face a firing squad, officials say. Lawyers for the men - Amrozi, Imam Samudra and Ali Gufron - had argued they should be allowed to die in a traditional Islamic way by having their heads cut off by a sword. But officials said they would not change the regulations.

The three men have told their lawyers they will not appeal for clemency from Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. Officials said that if no application for clemency was lodged within a month the executions would be carried out immediately. But one of the men's lawyers, Achmad Michdan, told journalists they planned to lodge an official letter next month complaining they did not get a fair hearing when the Supreme Court reviewed their cases this month.

Meanwhile, 10 Muslim extremists convicted over the bombings in Bali in 2002 and 2005 have been given a reduction in their sentences of up to six weeks to mark an Islamic holiday. Iham Djaja, governor of Bali's Kerobokan jail, announced the reductions two days after the Australian Schapelle Corby learnt she had been denied one for a second time this year because she had been found with a mobile phone in her cell.

Mr Djaja told journalists the sentence reductions were approved by authorities in Jakarta to mark Idul Fitri, the end of the Islamic fasting month. Corby, serving a 20-year sentence for possessing cannabis, had been eligible for a sentence reduction at Christmas because she is a Christian.
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Southeast Asia
Jakarta throws a lifeline to the Bali bombers
2007-10-09
INDONESIA'S Attorney-General has backed away from supporting capital punishment and indicated the executions of the Bali bombers will be delayed.
Whoa, nobody saw that coming ...
Hendarman Supandji's comments in an interview with the Herald also offer hope for six Australian drug couriers on death row in Bali, but they came as Kevin Rudd was mired in a damaging crisis over a Labor frontbencher's declaration that the bombers' lives should be spared.
Congratulations Mr. Howard on your forthcoming re-election ...
Opponents branded the Labor leader weak and insincere for reprimanding his foreign affairs spokesman, Robert McClelland, over a poorly timed speech articulating Labor's policy of universal opposition to capital punishment - including for the bombers, Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden.

Last night Mr Rudd would not guarantee Mr McClelland would retain his portfolio if Labor won the election, saying only he would "be part" of the frontbench team.
That was positively .. Hillary-esque ...
Friday will be fifth anniversary of the Bali bombings, which killed 202 people but Mr Supandji's remarks bring hope to six of the "Bali nine" on death row, several of whom have challenged the constitutionality of capital punishment.
I'm sure the aussie druggies's death sentence will eventually be ruled fully constitutional and applied; not so sure about the bali boomers.
A Constitutional Court ruling is imminent and Mr Supandji said the Government would implement its decision if it ruled against executions. However, the possibility of other Australian prisoners, including Schapelle Corby, returning home to serve the rest of their sentences had receded because negotiations on a prisoner-exchange treaty had stalled, Mr Supandji said.

Abdul Rahman Saleh - who Mr Supandji replaced earlier this year - strongly advocated capital punishment before the Constitutional Court. Executing drug traffickers was "essential" to deter drug use, he said. But Mr Supandji said Mr Saleh's remarks were "the personal opinion of the former attorney-general. It depends on the community in Indonesia as a whole, because the legislation is the product of parliament. "However, there is still controversy among the community about capital punishment. I leave it up to the people. If the Indonesian nation rejects it, as Attorney-General I have to follow it."

Internationally, nations were tending to abolish capital punishment and the issue needed to be carefully considered, he said.

The Constitutional Court would decide if its decision applied to people already sentenced or only future cases, Mr Supandji said. He dismissed calls to immediately execute the three convicted Bali bombers, Amrozi, Imam Samudra and Ali Ghufron, before Friday's anniversary. First the trio must receive a copy of the rejection of their final appeal, then they would be asked if they would appeal for clemency. "This will prolong the process," Mr Supandji said.

On Monday night, Mr McClelland said if Australia were to lead a regional movement to abolish capital punishment, it must oppose capital punishment in all cases. He singled out for criticism John Howard's support for the execution of the Bali bombers, Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden, saying it undermined attempts to save Australians abroad from death row and persuade other nations to abolish executions.

As Bali victims and their families reacted angrily, Mr Rudd said Mr McClelland's speech was insensitive because of the approaching anniversary of the Bali attacks. As well as berating his frontbencher, Mr Rudd blamed staff members, including his own, for not vetting the speech.

He rejected Mr McClelland's suggestion Australia form a coalition of like-minded nations to stamp out capital punishment in Asia, saying the United Nations was the preferred vehicle. Mr Rudd has long opposed capital punishment globally but was forced to talk tough to try to dampen the crisis. "I believe that terrorists should rot in jail until the next Ramadan for the term of their natural lives and then one day be removed in a pine box," he said. The Government said he was weak because Mr McClelland was simply articulating Labor policy.

"Mr Rudd doesn't even have the courage or the decency to stand by his own policy [because] the so-called timing is inconvenient," the Foreign Affairs Minister, Alexander Downer, said. "How can you run a country like that. You need to be a person of principle."

The Prime Minister said Mr Rudd was blaming others when he should accept responsibility. Mr Howard also opposes the death penalty but said he would never argue for clemency for a terrorist. Trying to spare the bombers was "distasteful".

The Treasurer, Peter Costello, accused Labor of supporting the bombers. "Let's have some sympathy for the 88 [Australians] dead and their families rather than sympathy for those people who cruelly and cold-bloodedly decided to kill them for no reason other than they were Australians."

Mr Rudd rejected these assertions as "absolute nonsense" and "pre-election politics". "No diplomatic intervention will ever be made by any government that I lead in support of any individual terrorist life," he said.

Mr Supandji said the three Bali bombers technically had no further right to appeal. He said they could attempt to have a district court reopen their cases and if it did "then we have to wait again". Lawyers for the men have indicated they would attempt to stretch out proceedings. "I cannot give any kind of estimate about when the execution will take place, but you can see from the process that it will take longer," he said.
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Down Under
'Tense' Aussie tourists boycott Indonesia
2006-04-08
AUSTRALIAN tourists are staying away from Indonesia as tensions between the countries escalate.

Tourist numbers have halved amid terrorism fears and anger at the treatment of Australian drug-runners.
They could fall even further as diplomatic relations deteriorate over Australia's decision to grant political asylum to 42 people, including several independence activists, from the Indonesian province of West Papua.

Figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics reveal 16,500 Australians visited Indonesia in February, down from 32,500 in the same month last year.

Despite terrorist attacks in Jakarta and Bali, Indonesia remained among our top four tourist destinations until September, but numbers dropped dramatically after the second Bali bombing in October.

Indonesia no longer ranks among Australians' top 10 destinations.

Thailand has been the big winner, enjoying a 45 per cent increase in Australian tourists between February 2005 and February 2006, according to the bureau.
More Australians also are visiting Singapore, India, Fiji and the US, especially Hawaii.

Flight Centre spokesman Haydn Long said Bali's tourist trade had not recovered as it did after the first terrorist bombings in 2002. "People aren't going there in great numbers," he said.

The latest travel advisory from the Department of Foreign Affairs warns of a "high threat" of terrorist attacks in Indonesia and says Australians should reconsider plans to go there.

But Mr Long said the tourist boycott was probably due to a combination of factors, including resentment over the treatment of Schapelle Corby and the Bali Nine drug smugglers.

"Tourists went to Bali for the people, the beach, the affordability – Thailand also offers a lot of that kind of appeal," he said.

Barring further terrorist attacks, Bali is expected to recover, but it may take some years.

"From what we've seen it will probably be a bit slower than previously," Mr Long said.
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Down Under
2 Australians sentenced to die by firing squad
2006-02-14
DENPASAR, Indonesia - An Indonesian court on Tuesday sentenced two young Australian men to die by firing squad for attempting to smuggle heroin from the resort island of Bali, verdicts that could strain ties with Canberra.

The sentences matched what prosecutors had demanded for Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, the accused masterminds of a group of nine Australians arrested on Bali last April for trying to smuggle more than 18 lbs. of heroin to Australia.

Activists from an Indonesian anti-narcotics group inside the courtroom shouted “Hooray! Long live the judges!” when the verdicts were read out in separate sessions.

The court also sentenced two drug couriers to life in jail, after giving the same punishment to two others on Monday.

Chan, 22, shook his head, stared at the ceiling and then smirked when the verdict was delivered. Both he and Sukumaran, 24, are from Sydney. “There are no mitigating factors. His statements throughout the trial were convoluted and he did not own up to his actions,” chief judge Arif Supratman said, while handing down Chan’s verdict. “His actions ... tainted Bali’s name as a resort island.”

The death sentences could ignite criticism in Australia, which has abolished the capital punishment.Australia had urged Jakarta not to impose the death penalty on any of the group and will plead for clemency for any condemned to die, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said on Tuesday.

Lawyers for Chan said they would appeal.“Life and death are God’s decisions. If it is made through a court verdict that equals murder,” said lawyer Agus Saputra.
Sounds like Agus is from the ACLU.
Prosecutors had said Chan was the “driving engine” of the operation. He was arrested inside a Sydney-bound flight at Bali’s airport after police had caught the four defendants sentenced to life with packages of heroin strapped to their bodies inside the airport.

Prosecutors had said Sukumaran helped strap the packages on the four couriers and was a planner of the operation. He was arrested at a Bali hotel.

The latest Australians to get life in jail were Michael Czugaj, 20, from Brisbane and Martin Stephens, 29, of Wollongong. Their sentences also matched what prosecutors had demanded. Czugaj appeared tense and stared at a translator sitting beside him as the verdict was read out in the Indonesian language.

Around 20 foreigners, most of them Africans, are on death row in Indonesia for drug offences. The latest foreigners shot by firing squad for drug offences were two Thais in October 2004. They had sat on death row for eight years.

The final stage of an appeal allows inmates on death row to seek clemency from the president.

The verdicts against the Australians have highlighted Indonesia’s zero tolerance for drug offences. Under Indonesian law, a prosecution demand is non-binding for judges but is seen as a strong recommendation.

On Monday, the court jailed Renae Lawrence for life even though prosecutors had asked judges to show leniency by jailing her for 20 years because of her cooperation in the case. Lawrence, 28, from the city of Newcastle, is the only female of the group, dubbed the “Bali Nine” by Australian media.

Among verdicts of recent years, the same court jailed Australian woman Schapelle Corby for 20 years last May after she was found guilty of smuggling marijuana.
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Southeast Asia
Bali bombers moved to island 'Alcatraz'
2005-10-11
INDONESIA has moved the three ringleaders of the 2002 Bali bombings on death-row because of security concerns at their prison in Denpasar.

The men were transferred in three armoured cars and guarded by about 30 heavily armed police.
Their move to a higher security jail came on the eve of the third anniversary of the October 12, 2002 bombings in which 202 people died, including 88 Australians.

So-called smiling assassin Amrozi bin Nurhasyin, Imam Samudra and Mukhlas – all awaiting execution – were moved this afternoon from Bali's Kerobokan Prison to Batu Prison on Nusakambangan, an island off the south Java coast, Bali justice ministry spokesman IG Rata said.

The high-security jail is home to former Indonesian dictator Suharto's son, Tommy, who is serving a 15-year sentence for masterminding the murder of a supreme court judge.

"They were moved for security reasons," Mr Rata said. He said the transfer order had come directly from Indonesian Justice Minister Hamid Awaluddin in Jakarta.

He said the letter arrived yesterday but the transfer had been planned for more than two months.
"The soil at Kerobokan and the walls are too fragile and the prison is too full," he said.

"There is only capacity for 338 prisoners there but there are now more than 800 in there."

Batu Prison, about 250km south-east of Jakarta, is known as Indonesia's "Alcatraz".

The jail is home to the country's most dangerous criminals.

The overcrowded Kerobokan Prison is where Australian convicted drug smuggler Schapelle Corby is serving her 20-year jail term. It also houses the so-called Bali Nine, whose trials for alleged drug trafficking began today in Denpasar.

Indonesian police have questioned the three death-row bombers over the recent triple suicide blasts in Kuta and Jimbaran, which killed 20 people including four Australians.

Yesterday more than 100 Balinese had staged an angry protest demanding the immediate execution of Amrozi and two other attack ringleaders who are on death row.

Protesters were expected to rally outside Kerobokan prison tomorrow to demand the immediate execution of the trio.
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Down Under
Drug-accused model says she's a Muslim
2005-08-29
An Australian model facing drugs charges in Bali has declared herself a Muslim and adopted an Islamic headdress to shield her face from media attention.
Here's a pic of the lovely Michelle without her burka.
Wowzers.
Adelaide-born Michelle Leslie, 24, appeared covered from head to toe as she was led from her cell at Bali police headquarters, where she is facing up to 15 years in jail if convicted on charges of possessing two tablets of ecstasy.

Wearing black pants, shirt and a Muslim headdress with netting to allow her to see, Leslie walked to a holding room to meet with her friend Norah Cullen and her new legal team. Leslie, who is of Australian and Filipina heritage, models underwear, swimwear and other clothes, and last year appeared in little more than body paint at a modelling assignments.

Australian solicitor Ross Hill, who is working with Leslie's team of five Indonesian lawyers, said the Sydney-based model was a Muslim and her cover-all headdress was a response to the heavy media presence in Bali. She has previously appeared with a sarong covering her head. "That (the outfit) is just something that we all thought about just to keep her covered, you know, we're just trying to keep things down," Hill said in a brief statement to journalists.

But later, after consulting with Leslie, family spokesman Sean Mulcahy said the model had decided to cover up for religious purposes. "Michelle as a Muslim made the decision to wear the hijab (head covering) to find solace with God, not for any other purpose," Mulcahy said.
"Please don't let them kill her!"
He would not comment on how long Leslie had been a Muslim or whether her career in modelling conflicted with her beliefs. "That's a matter entirely for Michelle after she finishes with this situation," he said.

Mulcahy said Leslie was in good spirits and not upset her parents did not plan to visit her. "Michelle has a person closest to her at this point in time in Norah Cullen," Mulcahy said.

Cullen, who was granted special access by police to meet Leslie in her cell and later to spend the whole day with her in a police holding room, has identified herself as the model's business manager and best friend.

Earlier, three other people identified by Mulcahy as friends arrived with sarongs over their heads and briefly met with Leslie. Mulcahy said Leslie's relatives did not want to come to Bali and face the media scrutiny that accompanied the trial of Gold Coast woman Schapelle Corby.

Leslie was not interrogated and police are still awaiting the formal result of tests on urine, blood and the pills allegedly seized from her handbag at a dance party near Kuta. She has denied drug use.

Leslie, in demand for her exotic Eurasian features, had just completed an assignment in Singapore before she flew to Bali for a holiday. She models internationally under the name of Michelle Lee, and recently became the new face of Antz Pantz underwear.
Link


Down Under
Ozzie Young Libs (!!!) Call for Terror 'Hit Squads'
2005-08-03
Now that's what I call liberal thinking... h/t LGF
Young Libs' terror hit squad
Victoria's Young Liberals have called on the Howard Government to train hit squads to track down those behind the Bali bombing.

The "war on terror" motion was adopted with a two-thirds majority at a Young Liberal Movement meeting on Monday night.
"The YLM calls on the Australian Government to train undercover agents to kidnap or kill those responsible for the Bali bombing," the resolution reads.

Supporters of the motion argued the disparity between the 20-year sentence for drug smuggler Schapelle Corby and the two-year sentence for radical Muslim cleric Abu Bakir Bashir justified kidnapping terrorist suspects overseas and bringing them to trial in Australia.

The motion was moved by YLM policy vice-president and Melbourne University Liberal Club member Alex Lew.

The resolution is not binding on the Liberal Party.
There's definitely a different flavor of Kool Aid available Down Under, heh. Let's import some of that, plz.
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Down Under
Field day for Indon propaganda
2005-06-07
Indons condemn security hoax From correspondents in Jakarta June 7, 2005

INDONESIA today condemned as a "terror threat" the second security hoax at its embassy in Canberra in a week, amid growing resentment towards its neighbour's obsession with a young Australian woman jailed in Bali on drugs charges.

The propaganda boon of an envelope of white powder sent to the embassy was accompanied by an abusive letter WRITTEN IN INDONESIAN

Foreign Minister Hassan Wirayuda said the incident was "part of a wave of threat of terror" against Indonesia.

Also, websites supporting Schapelle Corby such as banbali.com were subjected to repeated hack attacks and porn postings. The servers were traced back to Indonesia. That story didn't make the news though it appeared on the newswires last monday.

Many of Corby's supporters, who back her claim that she was the victim of an international smuggling syndicate, have threatened to boycott Bali as a holiday destination and have demanded the return of aid for Indonesian tsunami victims.

And rightly so, this was a miscarriage of justice by a tinpot 3rd world court that was overtly biased. They didn't even have a translator in court for her final plea so the judges sat there looking at her without understanding a word she said. It was a sham trial. There was not enough evidence to convict her in an Aussie court. She wanted the bag fingerprinted: they refused. She wanted the pot analysed by Australian police drug experts to track where it came from: they refused. She underwent drug tests: all negative. She asked for CCTV security camera footage: there wasn't any.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesia probes suspicious letter
2005-06-06
INDONESIAN police are checking a letter containing a "strong smell" sent to the head of a Bali court that recently jailed Schapelle Corby on drugs charges.

"Members of the police forensic laboratory, including officers from Jakarta, are investigating the smell and the letter has been taken for laboratory tests," Bali police spokesman A.S. Reniban said today.
The investigation follows an incident last week in which Indonesia's embassy in Canberra was sealed off in a biological agent scare triggered by an envelope containing a white powder.

Although it later proved to be harmless, authorities believed the letter was the work of supporters of Corby, a 27-year-old Australian woman jailed for 20 years last month for attempting to smuggling marijuana onto Bali.

Mr Reniban said judge Nengah Suriada had a dizzy spell on opening the noxious letter last Friday.

However, the judge had not reported the incident until today, when he returned to work and found his office still contained the odour, he said.

The letter was made to look as though it had been sent by the Australian consulate in Bali but did not carry the mission's letterhead, Mr Reniban said.

A second unopened letter also sent to the Bali prosecutor's office had been collected for investigation.

The results of the tests were not known.

Australian outrage against the Corby verdict has threatened to upset improving relations between the two countries, despite renewed pledges of friendship by Canberra and Jakarta

Many Australians have threatened to boycott Bali as a holiday destination and have demanded a return of cash donated to aid victims of last year's tsunami.
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Down Under
Australia Bracing For Backlash
2005-06-02
AUSTRALIA is bracing for a backlash as Prime Minister John Howard warned the nation's reputation had been damaged by the terror threat targeting the Indonesian embassy in Canberra.

A water cannon has been set up outside the Australian embassy in Jakarta and security is being reviewed amid fears extremists will seek revenge. Indonesian authorities have also promised to boost security for Schapelle Corby at her Bali jail after the terror threat was linked to community outrage over the 20-year jail term she received for drug smuggling.

Mr Howard said the letter, which was written in Indonesian, appeared to be linked to Corby's 20-year jail sentence for drug smuggling. "It's hard to escape the belief that there was a connection, let's put it that way," Mr Howard said.

He said there was a chance that terrorists could hit Australian interests in revenge for the intimidatory action.

The fallout from the incident is already being felt. Indonesian legislator Joko Susilo, who sits on Indonesia's House Foreign Affairs Committee, today urged his Government to issue travel warnings advising Indonesians not to travel to Australia. Vice-President Jusuf Kalla rejected the call, despite Mr Susilo warning the incident proved Australians were capable of committing their own acts of terrorism.

Three Indonesian National Police officers and an Indonesian agriculture ministry official have joined the hunt for the hoaxer, who could face up to 10 years in jail for the crime. "The sending of that particular letter was designed to cause major disruption and instil fear," ACT chief police officer John Davies told reporters.

Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Kevin Rudd meanwhile visited Indonesian ambassador Imron Cotan today and said the relationship between the two countries was strong enough to survive the fallout from the incident. But he said some people would always be critical of Australia.
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Down Under
Australian Prime Minister Apoligises To Indonesia Over Biological Attack
2005-06-01
PRIME Minister John Howard was forced to apologise to Indonesia yesterday after a biological attack on its embassy - and the first on Australian soil. A powder - which initial tests showed was either anthrax or one of four other lethal substances - was mailed to Indonesian Ambassador Imron Cotan and opened yesterday. The finger of blame points to Australia, with anger over the Schapelle Corby sentence behind the attack.

Mr Howard labelled the attack a "reckless act of indifference to human life" and confirmed the powder was "some kind of biological agent". Mr Cotan's secretary opened the envelope just after 10.30am yesterday and white powder spilled to the floor. Although there was initial belief the powder could have been fertiliser, Mr Howard said it tested positive for a "harmful" substance. He said it would be remarkable if the attack was not related to community anger over the 20-year sentence handed down to Corby by a Bali court for drug smuggling. Police and emergency services, including hazardous materials units, were called and the embassy was immediately locked down.

The powder was tested at the ACT Government analytical laboratory and found to be an unknown but potentially dangerous biological agent. Police spokesman refused to say if a note was included with the powder. Police sources said the tests were a long way from complete, and that false readings were common.

A statement from the Indonesian Government last night condemned and strongly deplored what it described as a "sorry and cowardly attempt of intimidation". It also welcomed the support and assistance of Australian officials.
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Down Under
Biological agent is criminal act: Australian PM
2005-06-01
PRIME Minister John Howard has condemned as criminal a possibly harmful biological agent sent to the Indonesian embassy in Canberra. Mr Howard said the agent was a powder sent in an envelope addressed to the Indonesian ambassador Imron Cotan. "It would be the first time if the preliminary results are confirmed, such a biological agent has been sent in Australia," Mr Howard said. "It will do great damage in the eyes of many Indonesian people to the relationship between our countries and it certainly won't help Schapelle Corby."
Mr Howard said the powder had tested positive for a harmful substance. Further tests would be done to confirm the result, he said. "The advice I have is that the reference 'biological agent' does not mean it is benign," he said.
He would not say if it was an act of terrorism, saying he would wait until tests confirmed the exact nature of the substance. "But when you send a substance of this type, if the analysis proves correct, it's an act of reckless indifference to human life and I apologise on behalf of the Australian people to the Indonesian embassy and to the Indonesian government," he said. "The preliminary test suggested it was a biological agent and further tests are now being carried out."
Mr Howard said it would be a remarkable coincidence if the incident was not linked to anger over the 20-year jail term handed to convicted drug smuggler Schapelle Corby in Bali last week. "It would be a remarkable coincidence if it were not (related)," he said. "If it is, can I say to those responsible — you will not achieve your objective. "Quite apart from the murderous criminality of doing something like this and the indifference and contempt to human life that it displays, it won't achieve the objective. It will have the opposite effect. "I plead with people if that is the motivation to think again if they really care."
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