This file photo taken on Nov. 28, 2012,
shows Lindsay June Sandiford, right, of Britain reacting inside a holding cell
after her trial at a court in Denpasar, Bali.
A British grandmother on death row in
Indonesia for smuggling drugs has condemned the “senseless, brutal” execution
of two Australians, and reportedly fears she could be next in line for the
firing squad.
Australian
drug traffickers Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran were executed by firing squad
on Wednesday, along with five other foreigners and one Indonesian, despite a
storm of international criticism and pleas from relatives.
Briton
Lindsay Sandiford, who was in the same jail as the Australians on the resort
island of Bali after being sentenced to death in 2013, said the pair were
“reformed men — good men who transformed the lives of people around them”.
“Their
senseless, brutal deaths leave the world a poorer place,” she said in a
statement given to AFP on Thursday via her lawyer Craig Tuck.
The BBC
quoted the lawyer as saying that Sandiford fears she could be next in line to
be executed, as Indonesian President Joko Widodo mounts a campaign against what
he says is a national emergency caused by rising drugs use.
Sandiford
— who was caught trying to smuggle a huge stash of cocaine into Bali — referred
to Chan as “my dear friend”.
“He
counselled and helped me through exceptionally difficult times after I was
sentenced to death in 2013.”
She
added the Australians, ringleaders of the so-called “Bali Nine” drug-smuggling
gang, used their time in Bali’s Kerobokan jail “to make life better for
everyone around them”.
“They
introduced the concept of rehabilitation to a prison that never had it before.
They organized painting classes, cookery classes and computer classes, and gave
practical help to make sure the poorest prisoners had food, clothing and
essentials.”
The pair
ensured that sick inmates had access to health care and hospital services which
were not covered by the prison budget, she said.
Sandiford
claims she was coerced into trafficking, and her family recently launched a
fundraising drive to raise the money needed to lodge an appeal at the
Indonesian Supreme Court, after the British government refused to fund her
legal fight.
New
Zealand lawyer Tuck, who is leading an international pro bono legal
team representing Sandiford, says the money is needed to retain Indonesian
lawyers who can fight her case.
If this
challenge fails, Sandiford still has the opportunity to appeal for clemency
from Joko.
The
convicts executed Wednesday recently had their mercy pleas rejected by the
president, and Jakarta has repeatedly insisted his decision is final.
Agence
France-Presse
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