Pubdate: Wed, 23 Jun 2004 Source: This Day (Nigeria) Copyright: 2004 This Day. Contact: http://www.thisdayonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2870 Authors: Dipo Okunmuyiwa and Ado Ekiti 339 REPATRIATED DRUG CONVICTS SEEK PARDON Three hundred and thirty-nine Nigerians repatriated from Thailand jails last year by the Federal Government and clamped into jail in the country after serving various jail terms for drug related offences in that Asia country have appealed to President Olus-egun Obasanjo to release them on compassionate ground. The prisoners, who have been held in Ilesa, Umuahia, Aba, Kuje and Minna prisons, were jailed in Thailand for drug related offences and were serving prison sentences ranging from 25 years to life imprisonment before they were brought to Nigeria. In their petition addressed to President Obasanjo and made available to City Diary, they claimed that 47 of them had died in Thailand prisons before 1989 and 2003, before they were brought to the country last year. According to them, they had thought that their sentences would be reviewed in line with the Nigeria legal system, which stipulated 15 years for drug related offences, but were surprised that they have remained in prison without any hope of re-gaining their freedom in the nearest future. "We want to appeal to the federal government to finish the good work they started by expediting action in bringing an end to our predicament," they pleaded. "By all standard, we have suffered enough as we went through a lot of physical and mental abuse in Thailand from the hands of both judicial and prison authorities due to language barrier, ignorance and prejudice. "For over a year now, we have been undergoing mental torture and agony from the constant news of the loss of our parents and loved ones even after we have arrived in the country," they added. The repatriated prisoners lamented that most of them at present have either gone beyond, or were fast approaching the middle age barrier without having the opportunity of getting married, adding that the financial and moral support they enjoy from friends and relations have waned over the years. According to them, nationals of other countries like America, and Spain, among others rescued from the same Thailand prisons by their home governments have since been set free after going through the legal process of converting their sentences to more humane punishments in their various countries. Having variously spent between 10 and 15 years in Thailand prisons before they were repatriated , the prisoners said, they thought they would have by now re-gained their freedoms, adding that they had earlier signed consent forms and indicated their willingness to be subjected to the Nigerian judicial system. "Many of us came back home with medical records that call for urgent humanitarian considerations. In addition, we have among us those who are aged," the drug convicts claimed.