Three Nigerians and one Indonesia were executed by firing squad shortly
after midnight local time, reports say. Those who were executed have been named
as three Nigerians - Seck Osmane, Humphrey Jefferson Ejike, Michael Titus Igweh
and one Indonesian Freddy Budiman.
Those who remain on death row include three other Indonesians, a
Pakistani, an Indian, two other Nigerians and two Zimbabweans. It is not clear
why their executions did not proceed.
"Of course there are considerations for it," was all Deputy Attorney
General for Crimes, Noor Rachmad would say. He said those who had been executed
had filed for judicial reviews twice and both were rejected.
There has been no confirmation yet from the government. The remaining 10
are expected to be put to death in the coming days. Human rights organisation
Amnesty International condemned the executions as a "deplorable act that
violates international and Indonesian law".
Relatives had gathered there earlier in the day to say goodbye to loved
ones. It also said 17 ambulances were sent to the island - 14 of them carrying
coffins, Jakarta Post reports.
All 14 had been moved into isolation cells ahead of the executions. A vigil
was held outside the presidential palace on Thursday night to protest against
the executions, although most Indonesians support the death penalty for drug
offences according to opinion polls.
The government insists they are a necessary deterrent in the war against
drugs, with officials regularly citing statistics that 40 to 50 people die from
drug-related causes a day.
"It is an action to stop the rapid spread of drug in Indonesia - today
Indonesia has become the main destination in the Asian market," said Foreign
Ministry spokesman Arrmanatha Nasir.
Source: The Age/BBC/
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