Australia PM Pleads with Indonesia over Death Row Men
Prime Minister Tony Abbott Saturday pleaded with Indonesia to heed Australia's call for clemency for two death row convicts, and warned that Canberra would make its displeasure known should the executions go ahead.
No date for the executions of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran has been released but an Indonesian official said governments with death row prisoners had been invited to a meeting with the foreign ministry on Monday.
Chan, 31, and Sukumaran, 33, are facing execution by firing squad as ring leaders of the so-called Bali Nine group trafficking heroin from Indonesia's island of Bali into Australia.
"Millions of Australians are feeling very, very upset about what may soon happen to two Australians in Indonesia," Abbott told reporters in Sydney.
"And my plea, even at this late stage, is for Indonesia to be as responsive to us as it expects other countries to be to them when they plead for the life of their citizens on death row overseas."
Australian media reported that there are 360 Indonesians on death row around the world, including in Malaysia, Singapore, China, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, with 230 of these on drugs charges.
Abbott, in an interview with The Daily Telegraph, also noted that Australia had stood by close neighbour Indonesia in times of need, particularly after the devastating 2004 Asian tsunami.
"We abhor the death penalty, we regard it as barbaric," he told the paper.
Asked whether Canberra would withdraw Australian officials if the executions go ahead, Abbott said: "We will find ways of making our displeasure known."
"We respect Indonesia's sovereignty but we would very much appreciate an act of magnanimity in this case," he added.
- Monday meeting -
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has warned Jakarta against underestimating the strength of public feeling for the pair, sentenced to death in 2006 for attempting to mastermind the trafficking of more than eight kilogrammes (17.6 pounds) of heroin out of Bali into Australia the previous year.
She said travellers could choose to boycott Indonesia, whose Bali island is an extremely popular holiday spot with Australians.
Australian politicians are united in opposing the execution of Chan and Sukumaran, who have worked to rehabilitate themselves in their decade behind bars.
But both have lost their appeals for clemency to new President Joko Widodo -- whose government recently executed six convicted drug smugglers.
Widodo has been a vocal supporter of capital punishment and has vowed a tough approach to ending what he has called Indonesia's "drug emergency".
An Indonesian foreign affairs spokesman said Saturday that representatives of several countries had been invited to a meeting on Monday to explain the notification process after a clemency is rejected.
"The embassies of the convicts which have their clemency rejected will be in the meeting," Arrmanatha Nasir told Agence France Presse.
"I don't know yet whether the ministry is the one who will notify the embassy on the date (of execution) because the attorney-general office might notify it directly to the convicts who will later tell their family and embassy."
The uncertainty is wearing on Sukumaran said friend, Australian artist Ben Quilty, who said his final goodbye to the convict just days ago.
Quilty said Sukumaran was unable to sleep for fear that "in the middle of the night there will be knock at the door" by prison officials to take him to his death.
"I think he's pretty resolved for what is going to happen to him and it's obvious they're making preparations inside the prison for him to move out," Quilty told broadcaster ABC.
"It was a very hard thing to leave him there."