Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jun 2006 Source: Jakarta Post (Indonesia) Copyright: The Jakarta Post Contact: http://www.thejakartapost.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/645 EXECUTIONS PREPARED FOR BALI BOMBERS, 16 DRUG TRAFFICKERS The Attorney General's Office says it is preparing to execute three convicted Bali bombers and 16 drug traffickers sentenced to death for their offenses. AGO spokesman I Wayan Pasek Suarte did not reveal when the bombers -- Imam Samudra, 36, Amrozi 43, and his elder brother Ali Ghufron, 46, alias Mukhlas -- would face firing squads. The law forbids authorities from publicly releasing dates for executions until after the events, although the convicts and their families are informed in advance. Pasek said the AGO had received preliminary approval from Justice and Human Rights Minister Hamid Awaluddin to carry out the executions of the bombers at Nusakambangan Island, a heavy-guarded prison in waters off Cilacap in Central Java where they are on death row. Normally, death row convicts are executed in jails in the jurisdiction where their crimes were committed. However, the bombers would executed outside of Bali for "safety reasons", Pasek said. "The justice minister hasn't approved (the executions) formally, but thanks to our excellent relations with him, we can assure you that we have received a positive signal from the minister," he said. Pasek said Imam, Amrozi and Mukhlas and their families had made formal statements they would not seek clemency from the President. "That's why we are preparing all the necessary procedures for the executions," he said. However, a lawyer for the terrorists, Ahmad Dinan, said the defense team planned to petition the Supreme Court to review the sentences. A "legal loophole" would be the focus of the defense's request for a case review, Dinan said. "The convictions have violated the Constitution Court's ruling that laws cannot be retroactive. Because the law on terrorism was passed after the 2002 Bali bombings, it should not be applied in this case," he told The Jakarta Post. The Denpasar District Court sentenced the three militants to death in September 2003 for the 2002 bombings that killed 202 people, most of them tourists from overseas. Pasek said prosecutors would also execute 16 of 43 men and women the state had sentenced to death for drug trafficking. On Saturday, national narcotics agency head I Made Mangku Pastika, speaking at an event to mark the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, urged prosecutors to quickly execute 39 drug traffickers on death row. His call was followed by cheers from thousands of people attending the event. "Responding to the demand from Pak Made Mangku Pastika, I hereby clarify that there are 16 men and women who will soon face the death penalty," Pasek said. Of the 43 convicts on death row, 13 are appealing their sentences, 10 are filing case review requests with the Supreme Court and four others are waiting for presidential clemency. Pastika said at least 15,000 Indonesians died of narcotics-related illnesses a year. Two foreign nationals convicted of trafficking offenses were executed in 2004, and two murderers faced firing squads a year later. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman