News
Indonesia Executes Six Nigerians, Eight Others Over Drugs …Rejects Pleas For Clemency
Barring last minute
changes, the Government of Indonesia, at midnight, yesterday, executed six Nigerians among 12 who have been on death row for years over drug-related offences.
The Tide learnt that the families of the six Nigerians and eight others on death row in Indonesia were granted last visits, yesterday, as their executions loomed, a lawyer said.
The lawyer, Antonius Karwayu, who represented two of the convicts, said that the convicts could face a firing squad at the Nusa Kambangan prison complex off the coast of Java on Thursday.
Karwayu said, “The families have been notified that there would be executions and the convicts had been asked for their last wishes.
“Their families were given until 3pm today to visit them so it is likely that the executions would be carried out tonight.”
The Attorney General’s office has not announced a date for the executions but spokesman Muhammad Rum confirmed that 14 convicts would be executed soon.
“I have only been informed of those three names,” he said.
The Community Legal Aid Institute, which advocates for the convicts, said the convicts facing execution were four Indonesians, six Nigerians, two Zimbabweans, one Indian and one Pakistani.
But Amnesty International had outlined “systematic flaws” in the trials of several of the death row inmates, and warned the executions could not proceed while appeals for clemency were pending.
Diplomats and lawyers say they were given the legally required three days notice of the plan on Tuesday afternoon and believed the earliest it could happen was Friday.
“This cannot happen. I am very concerned. This cannot happen,” Ricky Gunawan, a lawyer for a Nigerian convict set to face the firing squad, told newsmen.
“It is clearly against the law. This execution has been completely under secrecy from the start.”
Family members of Michael Titus Igweh, a Nigerian prisoner, said his case was still under review.
“I don’t think this is fair. They should fulfil his legal rights first,” Igweh’s sister-in-law Nila, who gave just one name, told reporters in Cilacap.
Local and international human rights groups have urged Indonesian President Joko Widodo to halt the impending executions.
In 2015 Indonesia executed 14 death-row convicts in a move that drew criticism from the UN and the EU.
According to the Indonesian Justice Ministry, about 121 people are currently on death row in Indonesia, including 35 foreigners, mainly for drug-related crimes.
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