Pubdate: Fri, 06 Aug 2004 Source: Gulf Daily News (Bahrain) Copyright: 2004 Gulf Daily News. Contact: http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2979 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) INDONESIA EXECUTES INDIAN DRUGS MAN JAKARTA: Indonesia executed yesterday an Indian national sentenced to death in 1995 for drug smuggling, ending a three-year gap in carrying out the death penalty. The execution came despite an appeal from the European Union and sparked criticism from human rights groups. It also follows pledges by President Megawati Sukarnoputri, locked in a tough election battle, to get tough on drugs traffickers. A police firing squad shot convicted heroin smuggler Ayodhya Prasadh Chaubey in the North Sumatra capital of Medan before dawn, national police spokesman Paiman said. "It was carried out under the authority of the prosecutors. Our men were the executioners," he said. Indonesia last carried out the penalty in 2001, when it executed two men convicted of multiple murders. Foreigners In an interview with Indonesian broadcaster SCTV a day before his execution, Chaubey said he did not deserve the death penalty and alleged there were problems with the evidence presented by police. The Indian embassy said it would not comment on the legal aspects of the case but that it had requested reconsideration of an appeal by the convicted man. President Megawati has vowed to get tough in the war on drugs, and the courts have handed down a handful of death sentences on convicted drug felons, most of them foreigners. About a dozen foreign drug offenders are on death row, many of them Africans. All of the four Indonesians awaiting execution are female couriers working for foreign syndicates. Death penalty advocates have complained that the rulings were merely rhetoric because Indonesia had not carried out the death penalty on a drug smuggler for a decade. Human rights campaigners have pushed for an end to the death penalty, which they say has proven ineffective in deterring the country's thriving illegal drug business. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager