|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Bali Nine alleged drug traffickers set up for
execution by Australian police
By Rick Kelly
31 October 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Prosecution evidence put forward at trials of the Bali
Nine currently underway in Bali, Indonesia, establishes
that the Australian Federal Police (AFP) engaged in a calculated
operation to set up the young Australians for execution by firing
squad. The police provided Indonesian authorities with detailed
information about the alleged drug smugglers activities,
and encouraged their arrest in Indonesia, despite knowing that
this would almost certainly lead to the subsequent imposition
of the death penalty.
The AFP has faced mounting scrutiny over its role in the Bali
Nine affair. The agencys cooperation with the Indonesian
police has directly contravened the spirit of the mutual assistance
treaty enacted by Canberra and Jakarta in 1999, which was widely
believed to prevent Australian authorities from facilitating the
execution of its own citizens. Capital punishment is illegal within
Australia, and under the 1988 Extradition Act, the attorney-general
cannot authorise the extradition of an Australian national if
the death penalty may be imposed.
The accused were all arrested on April 17, 2005. Four of the
group (Renae Lawrence, Martin Stephens, Michael Czugaj, and Scott
Rush) were caught at Balis Denpasar airport acting as couriers,
or mules. A total of more than eight kilograms of
heroin was found strapped to their bodies. Four others (Tach Duc
Thanh Nguyen, Myuran Sukumaran, Si Yi Chen, and Matthew Norman)
allegedly connected to the operation were arrested at a Kuta hotel.
The alleged organiser, Andrew Chan, was arrested without drugs
after boarding a plane bound for Sydney. The accused are aged
between 18 and 29.
According to a senior Indonesian prosecutor, Australian police
made informal contact with their Indonesian counterparts in late
March, almost a month before the nine arrests. On April 8, Paul
Hunniford, the AFPs liaison officer in Bali wrote a three-page
letter to the Indonesian police, headed, Heroin couriers
from Bali to Australia, currently in Bali. Another note
was sent on April 12. The letters provided an extraordinary level
of detail of the alleged drug traffickers movements and
plans. The AFP also provided the Indonesian authorities with the
passport numbers and photographs of eight of the accused.
They will be carrying body packs (with white powder)
back to Australia, with packs on both legs and also with back
supports, one section of the initial letter read. They
have already been given the back supports. The packs will be strapped
to their bodies. They will be given money to exchange for local
currency to purchase oversized loose shirts and sandals.
The AFP officer even knew that the alleged couriers would avoid
wearing clothes with any metal attachments so as to avoid tripping
airport metal detectors, and that they had been advised to quit
smoking two weeks prior to the operation in order not to appear
anxious after disembarking from their plane in Australia.
Rather than waiting for the suspects to enter Australia where
they could be arrested and tried by Australian authorities, the
AFP encouraged their arrest in Indonesia. If you suspect
[Andrew] Chan and/or the couriers are carrying drugs at the time
of their departure, please take whatever action you deem necessary,
Hunniford wrote to the Indonesian police. He also suggested that
the Indonesians take surveillance photographs of the alleged drug
smugglers to later assist the prosecution. The AFP officer subsequently
observed the Australians arrest at Denpasar airport.
Even before the release of the correspondence between the Australian
and Indonesian police, the AFP was facing legal action over its
role in the Bali Nine affair. The families of two of the accusedScott
Rush and Renae Lawrencehave alleged denial of procedural
fairness, on the grounds that the father of one of the alleged
mules, 19 year-old Rush, tipped off the AFP as to his sons
activities on April 7, two days before he left Australia for Bali.
The Australian police did nothing except pass the information
on to the Indonesians.
The Howard government failed in its application before the
Federal Court to have the families claim dismissed, and
the hearing is due to begin on November 9. More details of the
AFPs collaboration with the Indonesian police may well emerge
in the course of the case.
The families application was spurred by their outrage
over the role of Australian authorities in the prosecution of
their children. Bob Lawrence, father of Renae, expressed his anger
against AFP Commissioner Mick Keelty on October 8: As far
as Im concerned and excuse the expression, he is an [expletive
deleted].... They should have been either arrested at the airport
here or followed to get the big guys. I dont know how [the
Australian police] sleep at night ... even if [the Bali Nine]
were guilty of doing it willingly, it still doesnt deserve
the death penalty.
The AFPs involvement in the Bali Nine case raises fundamental
questions about the role of Australian authorities in aiding death
penalty prosecutions in South-East Asia. Official AFP policy,
which has been endorsed by the Howard government, completely ignores
the issue of capital punishment with regard to international police
collaboration. As the Australian agency explained in a statement:
Under the formal agreements and guidelines in place, the
AFP can provide assistance to foreign countries on a police to
police basis where no charges have been laid, regardless of whether
the foreign country may investigate offences that attract the
death penalty.
This policy exploits what amounts to an extraordinary loophole
in the mutual assistance treaty between Australia and Indonesia,
which only blocks cooperation between authorities at the point
where charges are laid relating to crimes that could involve the
death penalty. As Australian Law Council president John North
explained: In Australia, both arrest and charge are close
to simultaneous, whereas the practice of Indonesian authorities
is not to charge until long after arrest and just prior to trial.
This juridical difference allowed the AFP to provide assistance
to the Indonesian police and prosecution for six months after
the Bali Nines arrest.
Attorney-General Philip Ruddocks formal withdrawal of
Australian cooperation following the laying of charges against
the nine will make no difference to the Indonesian prosecutions
case. No problem, Bali drug squad chief Colonel Bambang
Sugiarto assured the media. [AFP] statements are not important
according to the law.
Government and Labor back the AFP
The Howard government has consistently defended the AFPs
role in the arrest of the Bali Nine, and has ruled out any review
of the mutual assistance treaty. We have no intention of
reviewing police to police assistance in relation to the Australian
Federal Police and overseas law enforcement, Justice Minister
Chris Ellison declared on October 11. If anything, we want
to see that cooperation increased. We are certainly very satisfied
with the high level of cooperation.... Youve seen the runs
on the boards in relation to counter-terrorism and transnational
crime, and we want that to continue. Police to police assistance
will not change.
Labor leader Kim Beazley was asked on October 26 if the AFP
had done the right thing in the case. That issue
as to whether or not they absolutely got it right this time, as
I understand it, is going to be tested in the courts and we will
find out once its appropriately tested in the courts....
Australians do need to understand thisit is utterly critical
for this nation that there is intimate collaboration between the
AFP and the police forces of this region.
Labor shares the governments utter contempt for the fate
of the nine Australians threatened with state murder. The overriding
imperative for the entire political establishment is maintaining
good relations with Jakarta. The same concern, in relation to
Singapore, is evident in the Howard governments abandonment
of 25-year-old Australian Nguyen Van Tuong, who is due to be hanged
within weeks. In the Bali Nine case, the government is particularly
concerned not to jeopardise the rebuilding of Australias
connections with the Indonesian security forces, following strained
relations between the two countries over East Timor in 1999-2000.
Both the Howard government and the AFP have sought to justify
the Bali Nine investigation in terms of the so-called war on drugs.
Mick Keelty has claimed that more than 2,000 heroin overdoses
in Australia have been prevented by international police cooperation
of the kind that led to the arrests of the Bali Nine. Australia
is the only country to have experienced a reduction in the supply
of heroin in the last three to four years, the police chief
told ABC Radio.
Right-wing columnist Miranda Devine spelled out the logic of
this argument in the Sydney Morning Herald. The war
on drugs in Australia is working, she wrote April 21. The
Bali Nine are just part of the price.
In reality, the war on drugs has nothing to do
with protecting ordinary people from the dangers of drug addiction.
The Howard government has no more concern for the welfare of citizens
addicted to narcotics than it does for the fate of the Bali Nine.
Unanswered questions on Bali Nine operation
If the nine young people are guilty of acting as drug mules,
then they made a serious and tragic mistake, which may well cost
their lives. But whatever the outcome, it will make absolutely
no difference to the international heroin trade. None of the major
heroin suppliers connected to the Bali Nine case has been arrested,
and initial AFP claims that the investigation could result in
the break-up of international drug syndicates have been quietly
dropped.
Even with the AFPs specific intelligence, Indonesian
police failed to monitor Andrew Chan when he allegedly purchased
the heroin in Bali. This was despite the fact that all nine suspects
were under constant surveillance. The transaction was clearly
the most important part of the police operation, and could have
led to the prosecution of international heroin dealers. But the
Indonesian police claim they lost Chan on the streets of Kuta,
after he disguised himself by wearing different caps.
Paul Toohey in the Bulletin offered a more plausible
explanation: It would probably be too indelicate for the
AFP to inquire of their Indonesian colleagues how come they were
so stupid as to miss the most important part of their surveillance
job: the buy.... It is a particularly hard question for the AFP
to ask because it raises the possibility that the Indonesian police
did follow Chan, observed the deal, and decided to help themselves
to the heroin cash.
Cherry Likit Bannakorn, a Thai prostitute who allegedly sold
the drugs to Chan, has disappeared. On April 27, Man Singh Ghale,
an alleged international heroin kingpin who, according
to some reports, supplied the heroin to Chan via Bannakorn, was
shot dead in a Jakarta police raid. Witnesses reportedly
saw Ghale, a Nepalese, being led away by police with a bullet
wound to the leg, Toohey reported. He somehow took
another fatal shot while in police custody.... Ghale no longer
has anything to say for himself but it begins to look as though
he was a patsy.
The Indonesian autopsy report has never been released, despite
requests from at least one foreign embassy. According to an August
1 report in the Age: Doctors who carried out the
autopsy are too frightened to say how many times he was shot or
where the bullets entered his body, and Senior Superintendent
Indradi Tanos, of the narcotics division at police headquarters,
refused to disclose the contents of the report.
Tooheys suggestion that Ghale was used as a patsy is
just one possible explanation of his death. It could also be the
case that the trafficker was killed in accordance with the mafia
principle that dead men tell no tales. Had Ghale been put on trial,
he could have revealed details of connections he may have had
with senior security, political and business figures in Indonesia
and internationally.
The Nepalese national had previously been arrested by Indonesian
police in October last year. International police agencies, including
the US Drug Enforcement Agency, suspected that he was directing
major trafficking operations in America and Europe. Despite this,
Ghale somehow escaped from custody two days after his arrest.
Even more unusual is the fact that several weeks after
he fled custody, he returned to Bekasi, where police say a local
man agreed to rent a house on his behalf, the Age
reported. Why a fugitive would go straight back to the area
he had been living in when arrested remains unanswered. Then there
is the fact that 10 days after the nine Australians were arrested
in Bali, Ghale had still made no effort to flee his house, and
carried on living as normal [despite being under AFP surveillance].
No-one in the Howard government or the AFP has ever addressed
the question as to whether senior Indonesian police and security
officialsnot to speak of politicians and businesspeople
throughout the region, including Australiaare involved in
the heroin trade. Such is the real face of the war on drugs.
The major players with powerful connections go unmolested, while
those arrested and executed are almost always young people, caught
up in the lowest rungs of the drug trafficking ladder.
The effective abandonment by the Howard government of any pretence
of opposition to the death penalty is indicative of its wholesale
repudiation of fundamental civil liberties. Moreover, the bipartisan
defence of the AFPs setup of the Bali Nine is a stark indicator
of just how far the political establishment as a whole has gone
in abandoning basic legal and democratic rights, including opposition
to capital punishment.
See Also:
Howard government abandons Australian
citizen sentenced to death in Singapore
[26 October 2005]
Howard government leaves Bali
nine alleged drug runners to their fate
[11 May 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |