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Bali nine: Executions could be delayed months as judges re-examine Filipina maid's case
Sydney Morning Herald - March 17, 2015
The decision is significant for Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan because Indonesian authorities have consistently said they intend to execute all 10 drug felons simultaneously.
Supreme Court spokesman Suhadi said a panel of judges would be appointed this week. "After that the panel will examine and study her case. It will take months," he said in Kompas newspaper on Tuesday.
Filipina domestic worker Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso was sentenced to death in 2010 for attempting to smuggle 2.6 kilograms of heroin from Malaysia to Yogyakarta – Veloso maintains she was deceived by an acquaintance and did not know the drugs were in her suitcase.
Her lawyer argued she deserved a case review because the translator during her trial was only a student who did not have a license from the Association of Indonesian Translators. Case reviews take up to three months to be determined.
On March 12, Attorney-General spokesman Tony Spontana said Indonesian authorities would wait on the result of all legal processes lodged by the felons on death row before proceeding with the executions.
He said simultaneous executions were "more efficient and effective". "We don't want one to have to wait for another's execution before his own. That will affect the convicts' psychological state," he said.
Nine of the 10 drug felons are now understood to have launched legal proceedings. Chan and Sukumaran will have an appeal against the rejection of their clemency plea heard on Thursday. The Judicial Commission is also investigating claims the judges who sentenced them to death offered a lighter sentence in exchange for bribes.
And the family of Brazilian Rodrigo Gularte, who has been diagnosed with schizophrenia, are fighting for his life to be spared on the grounds he is mentally ill.
Meanwhile, the head of the Central Java Prosecutor's Office, Hartadi, warned Indonesia's sovereignty was at stake if the second batch of executions failed to take place.
In a speech at a ceremony to induct new officials, Hartadi reportedly said the president said the executions must go ahead despite foreigners manoeuvring to have the executions cancelled or at least delayed.
"The Prosecutor's office as part of the law enforcement system must not be daunted by the diplomatic approaches," Mr Hartadi said in Kompas.
[With Karuni Rompies.]
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