News (Media Awareness Project) - Indonesia: Police Seek Go-Ahead To Execute Drug Convicts |
Title: | Indonesia: Police Seek Go-Ahead To Execute Drug Convicts |
Published On: | 2004-06-21 |
Source: | Jakarta Post (Indonesia) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 07:30:23 |
POLICE SEEK GO-AHEAD TO EXECUTE DRUG CONVICTS
The National Police announced on Sunday that they were preparing a
firing squad on standby to execute the drug dealers currently on death
row, but the Attorney General's Office (AGO) said it had no immediate
plans regarding their execution.
"We have designated officers to carry out the executions. However, we
will have to wait for an order from the prosecutorial authorities ...
We hope they will issue such an instruction soon," National Police
chief Gen. Da'i Bachtiar said during an antidrug rally in Senayan,
South Jakarta.
Separately on Sunday, an AGO spokesman said all convicted drugs
dealers were appealing their sentences.
"Our data shows that there are no convicts to be executed in the near
future; they have all appealed to higher courts. We must wait for this
process to end before planning executions," Kemas Yahya Rahman told
The Jakarta Post.
But police data shows that at least four of the convicts have had
their appeals rejected by the Supreme Court and the President rejected
their pleas for clemency.
National Narcotics Agency (BNN) director Comr. Gen. Togar Sianipar
said that four out of the around 30 convicts on death row should have
been executed several months ago after their requests for presidential
pardons were rejected.
"They must be executed as soon as possible to show our sincerity in
eradicating drug trafficking. These executions would have a deterrent
effect on other dealers," he told the Post.
He was referring to a number of big-time death-row offenders whose
death sentences were upheld by the Supreme Court in 2001. Their
requests for clemency were also rejected by the President.
Under Laws No. 22/1997 on narcotics and No. 5/1997 on psychotropic
substances, certain drug offenses carry a maximum sentence of death.
The defendant may however appeal to the high court and later to the
Supreme Court.
Then although the Supreme Court hands down a ruling, a convicted
person may still ask the Court to review the case based on new
evidence, and then file up to two requests for presidential pardon as
stipulated in Law No. 3/1950 on clemency.
In the last 10 years only one person sentenced to death for drug
offenses has been executed -- -- Malaysian Chan Ting Tong alias Steven
Chong. The failure to execute those given the death penalty had caused
an increase in the number of drugs cases over the last three years,
Togar argued.
Togar's office and the University of Indonesia have found that around
4 percent of the population or around nine million people, used drugs
in 2003, an increase of almost 400 percent compared to the 2002
figure. "Medication for one addict costs Rp 5 million per month, so
for some nine million addicts mean we have to spend around Rp 45
trillion per month on medication alone," said Togar.
The National Police announced on Sunday that they were preparing a
firing squad on standby to execute the drug dealers currently on death
row, but the Attorney General's Office (AGO) said it had no immediate
plans regarding their execution.
"We have designated officers to carry out the executions. However, we
will have to wait for an order from the prosecutorial authorities ...
We hope they will issue such an instruction soon," National Police
chief Gen. Da'i Bachtiar said during an antidrug rally in Senayan,
South Jakarta.
Separately on Sunday, an AGO spokesman said all convicted drugs
dealers were appealing their sentences.
"Our data shows that there are no convicts to be executed in the near
future; they have all appealed to higher courts. We must wait for this
process to end before planning executions," Kemas Yahya Rahman told
The Jakarta Post.
But police data shows that at least four of the convicts have had
their appeals rejected by the Supreme Court and the President rejected
their pleas for clemency.
National Narcotics Agency (BNN) director Comr. Gen. Togar Sianipar
said that four out of the around 30 convicts on death row should have
been executed several months ago after their requests for presidential
pardons were rejected.
"They must be executed as soon as possible to show our sincerity in
eradicating drug trafficking. These executions would have a deterrent
effect on other dealers," he told the Post.
He was referring to a number of big-time death-row offenders whose
death sentences were upheld by the Supreme Court in 2001. Their
requests for clemency were also rejected by the President.
Under Laws No. 22/1997 on narcotics and No. 5/1997 on psychotropic
substances, certain drug offenses carry a maximum sentence of death.
The defendant may however appeal to the high court and later to the
Supreme Court.
Then although the Supreme Court hands down a ruling, a convicted
person may still ask the Court to review the case based on new
evidence, and then file up to two requests for presidential pardon as
stipulated in Law No. 3/1950 on clemency.
In the last 10 years only one person sentenced to death for drug
offenses has been executed -- -- Malaysian Chan Ting Tong alias Steven
Chong. The failure to execute those given the death penalty had caused
an increase in the number of drugs cases over the last three years,
Togar argued.
Togar's office and the University of Indonesia have found that around
4 percent of the population or around nine million people, used drugs
in 2003, an increase of almost 400 percent compared to the 2002
figure. "Medication for one addict costs Rp 5 million per month, so
for some nine million addicts mean we have to spend around Rp 45
trillion per month on medication alone," said Togar.
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