Only a
year after the execution of Australians Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan,
Indonesia is gearing up for another round of executions. Determined to keep it
low profile, Indonesian authorities are remaining tight-lipped about the
condemned.
If Indonesia has learnt anything from the diplomatic fiasco ignited by
last year's execution of 14 death-row inmates, it seems to be this: if you're
going to kill drug offenders, and particularly foreign nationals, keep it
low profile. Or better still, assemble a line-up from countries that
are less likely to remonstrate. Not the lesson, perhaps, that the international
community might have hoped for.
As Indonesia
gears up for another round of executions, it's becoming depressingly clear that
after the intense media coverage of 2015 – the political posturing, the
desperate pleas and impassioned headlines – this year's condemned will go
to their deaths in the forests of central Java with barely a murmur of protest. The
final wishes of executed Australians Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan
– for an end to the death penalty – will not be granted. Or not yet.
Indonesian
lawmakers are remaining tight-lipped about the condemned – who they are, and
how many – but there are rumoured to be up to 15 drug offenders, largely
non-Western foreign nationals of retentionist countries, who could be
executed as early as this week. "There is only the choosing of the specific
date. That's what I haven't been able to decide," announced
Attorney-General H.M. Prasetyo, as though pondering when to hold a
luncheon rather than when he will usher the next desperate band of convicts
onto the killing fields of Nusakambangan.
If the
public pronouncements from senior figures are distasteful, though – desultory
remarks about sprucing up the execution site, drilling the shooters, or
preparing facilities to accommodate the bodies of
the not-yet-dead – that's not exactly unique to Indonesia. The recent debate in Virginia on
the merits of the lethal injection cocktail versus 1800 volts of electricity
reminds us that there's no nice way to talk about state-sanctioned murder.
Authorities are resolved to avoid any "drama" this time around, as
though the macabre theatre of last year – the armoured Barracuda carriers and
brigades of masked security personnel – was not scripted by Indonesia itself.
"There won't be a soap opera like the last time", according to Minister for Political, Legal and
Security Affairs Luhut Panjaitan "because I think
that wasn't pretty". No indeed.
Of course,
the less said about these executions, the harder it is to scrutinise the
mechanics of Indonesia's capital punishment apparatus or the narratives of
those that are caught within it. Like Zulfiqar Ali, for instance, sentenced to death for possession of 300g
heroin: except that Ali wasn't in possession of the drug at all, and
the individual who was – and who fingered Ali as his supplier – has
since retracted his testimony.
This bleak
situation may not come as any surprise to legal experts or anyone else who witnessed,
with dismay and disbelief, the events of 2015. Young Filipina Mary Jane Veloso
came within minutes of an encounter with the firing squad before new evidence
– suggesting Veloso wasn't, in fact, a drug trafficker but a trafficked person – was finally conceded. And
in this, too, Indonesia is not alone.
Research from the United States reveals
that, conservatively, about 4 per cent of those sentenced to death are
innocent. That's around 8000 men and women in the US that have been placed,
falsely, on death row since the 1970s – and only a fraction of these will ever
be exonerated. The rash of forced confessions that
undermines the integrity of capital sentencing in Indonesia appears to be part
of an epidemic that spans the Middle East and even the United States. The death penalty, it
turns out, is not the ultimate way for the community to mete out justice, but
injustice.
In some
respects, the tide is turning. In April, an Indonesian delegate at the United
Nations general assembly special session on drugs was booed for defending the use of the death
penalty for drug crime – and there's no doubt its use in this
context is deeply troubling. But it's not clear why such public demonstrations
of scorn are reserved for Indonesia alone, and why the conversation around
capital punishment is perennially hijacked by a focus on the crime, rather than
the punishment. The number of offenders allegedly on Indonesia's hit list is
almost identical to the number put to death in the United States this year so
far; similar to that executed by state of Texas in 2015 alone.
Whether or
not the death penalty should be applied to drug crime or only reserved for more
serious crimes like murder is missing the point. Worse, this type of thinking
lures us into a dangerous moral calculus that leaves us at the mercy of our
greatest fears and our deepest prejudice: terrorism but never murder; murder
but never drugs; drugs but never apostasy. Because here's the thing – the fatal
flaws in the death penalty are the same regardless of crime.
The question
of who is sentenced to death and who is ultimately executed – and when
– has nothing to do with judicial impartiality and, in some cases,
precious little even to do with the penal code. The lottery of a system
that can arbitrarily hand death to one individual and a 10-year sentence
to another for the same crime is chilling, as is the unnerving correlation
between politics and executions – evident from Iran, to Indonesia, to the cynical timing
of Afghanistan's executions of Taliban prisoners a
fortnight ago. Research on US state elections reveal an even more
dismal statistic: executions are 25 percent more likely in election years than
other years, and elections increase this risk by an even larger
amount if the defendant is African-American. God bless America.
Capital
punishment – no matter where or how it's used – targets the disadvantaged with
a savage specificity. The key predictors of a death sentence in the US are not
the severity of the crime but victim race and geography, and in the
same way that capital punishment takes aim at blacks and Hispanics in the US, in Asia it is
largely reserved for 'the poor, and the poorly connected'. Corruption
may be rife in many Asian judicial systems – prompting some academics to tacitly advocate the bribery
of public officials – but in the US, too, capital sentences are simply not
handed to those that can afford good legal representation, according to Supreme Court justices. Indeed, the litany of
incompetence, including unethical and even criminal conduct, from attorneys in
capital cases is no less stunning in Dallas than it is in Denpasar.
And if
that's so, what difference does it make whether a death sentence is handed to a
drug smuggler in Bali or a murderer in Oklahoma? It's time we realised there's
no such thing as a justice system that's infallible, and dispensed with the
collective delusion that a death sentence – in Texas or Tehran or
Tangerang – is reserved for those most deserving of this ultimate measure
of justice. And while we're at it, it's time we abandoned the notion that
capital punishment has anything to do with justice in the first place.
Sarah Gill is an Age columnist
who has worked as a writer and a policy analyst. She is undertaking
postgraduate legal studies at the University of Western Australia.
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