Indonesia executes four Nigerians, others for drug offences
Indonesian
authorities on Tuesday executed four Nigerians and four others for drug-related
offences despite pleas by the United Nations, the European Union, Amnesty
International and the Federal Government.
The Nigerians
were identified as Martin Anderson, 50; Silvester Nwolise, 47; Okwudili
Oyatanze, 41, and Jamiu Abashin, 50.
The convicts
were reportedly taken to the Nusakambangan Island where they were executed by
firing squad on Tuesday evening.
According to a
report by the UK Guardian,
Abashin was said to be homeless in Bangkok when a new “friend” offered him $400
to take some clothes to Indonesia.
He was nabbed in
Surabaya with 5.5kilogrammes of heroin and sentenced to death in 1999.
Abashin was said
to have appealed for presidential clemency, claiming he never knew he was carrying
the drugs. His plea was rejected.
Nwolise was
sentenced to death in 2002 for smuggling a kilogramme of heroin into Indonesia.
Oyatanze was
sentenced to death in 2002, after being found guilty of attempting to bring
2.5kg of heroin through Jakarta in capsules inside his stomach.
The United
Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, had on Monday personally appealed to
Indonesia to stop their execution.
The European
Union had also berated Indonesia’s plans to execute the convicts.
The EU had noted
that the death penalty was not a solution to the rise in drug-related crimes in
the country.
The only woman
among the convicted, Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso, a Filipino, was
spared in the last minute because a woman who reportedly tricked her into
carrying drugs turned herself in.
The remains of
the convicted would be taken to Jakarta, the Indonesia capital, on Tuesday
according to reports.
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