Indonesia’s anti-drugs agency has proposed building a prison on an island guarded by crocodiles to hold death row drug convicts, an idea seemingly taken from a James Bond film.
Indonesia’s
anti-drugs agency has proposed building a prison on an island guarded by
crocodiles to hold death row drug convicts, an idea seemingly taken from a James Bond film .
The proposal is the pet project of
anti-drugs chief Budi Waseso, who plans to visit various parts of the
archipelago in his search for reptiles to guard the jail.
“We will place as many crocodiles as we can
there. I will search for the most ferocious type of crocodile,” he was quoted
as saying by local news website Tempo.
Waseso said that crocodiles would be
better at preventing drug traffickers from escaping prison as they could not be
bribed – unlike human guards.
“You can’t bribe crocodiles. You
can’t convince them to let inmates escape,” he said.
But he is banking on the convicts
lacking the crocodile-running skills shown by Roger Moore’s 007 in the Bond
movie Live and Let Die when he escapes from an island using the reptiles as
stepping stones.
The plan is still in the early
stages, and neither the location or potential opening date of the jail have
been decided.
Indonesia already has some of the toughest
anti-narcotics laws in the world, including death by firing squad for
traffickers, and sparked international uproar in April when it put to death
seven foreign drug convicts, including Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran .
But president Joko Widodo has
insisted that drug dealers must face death as the country is fighting a
“national emergency” due to rising narcotics use.
Despite the harsh laws, Indonesia’s
corrupt prison system is awash with drugs, and inmates and jail officials are
regularly arrested for narcotics offences.
Anti-drugs agency spokesman Slamet
Pribadi confirmed authorities were mulling the plan to build “a special prison
for death row convicts”.
He said only traffickers would be
kept in the jail, to stop them from mixing with other prisoners and potentially
recruiting them to drug gangs.
The agency is currently in
discussions with the justice ministry about the plan, he added.
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