Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jan 2006 Source: Australian, The (Australia) Copyright: 2006sThe Australian Contact: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/files/aus-letters.htm Website: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/35 Author: AAP Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) BALI NINE DEATHS WOULD 'STRAIN TIES' INDONESIA is braced for a public backlash in Australia against any death sentences meted out to the Bali Nine, says Foreign Minister Hassan Wirayuda. Prosecutors in Denpasar will start making sentence demands in the next fortnight for the nine Australians, who were arrested in April last year over a failed bid to smuggle 8kg of heroin worth $4 million from Bali to Sydney. Most trial watchers expect them to demand death sentences for some or all of the group, possibly straining relations with Australia. The requests to judges in Denpasar District Court will be delivered less than two months after a public outcry in Australia over Singapore's decision to hang Australian drug courier Nguyen Tuong Van. Mr Wirayuda, speaking after his annual foreign policy statement, said he was aware of the backlash in Australia to Van's hanging, including Attorney-General Philip Ruddock's description of the execution as "barbaric". "We anticipate in terms of bilateral relations between Indonesia and Australia that the sentence that might be delivered by our courts might create an emotional reaction on the part of the Australian public," Mr Wirayuda said. But he said any fallout from death sentences would be likely to pass quickly. "Like the case of the Australian citizen in Singapore, I think after a while there will be a good understanding, because it is not only that the death penalty is imposed to Australians, but also to other traffickers, both foreign and domestic," he said. Mr Wirayuda recently described relations between Jakarta and Canberra as at an all-time high following the 1999 nadir after a bloody rampage by Jakarta-backed militias in East Timor during a vote that led to the territory's independence. "Australia recognises Papua as part of the unitary state of Indonesia, so there are no more obstacles in the two countries' relations," he said. He added that the legal process in Bali was a domestic affair for Indonesia alone, a position well understood by the Australian Government. "They understand that in Indonesian positive law the death penalty is there and in practice our courts often impose the death penalty for serious offences like drug trafficking," Mr Wirayuda said. Van, 25, was hanged at Singapore's Changi prison despite repeated pleas for clemency from the Australian Government. He was convicted of carrying almost 400g of heroin at Singapore airport while travelling from Cambodia to Australia. Lawyers for the Bali Nine have called on the federal Government to begin lobbying Indonesia for clemency immediately. But Foreign Minister Alexander Downer has refused, saying the court process should be left to run its course before Australia lodges any appeals. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman