British mum
Lindsay Sandiford has been sentenced to death in Indonesia for drug
trafficking.
The woman, originally from Redcar in
Teesside, was arrested in May after police in Bali said they found 10.6lb of
cocaine in the lining of her suitcase.
A spokeswoman for the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office said: "We can confirm that a British national is
facing the death penalty in Indonesia.
"We remain in close contact with that
national and continue to provide consular assistance.
"The UK remains strongly opposed to
the death penalty in all circumstances."
Sandiford, 56, was sentenced after being
found guilty of violating the country's strict drug laws by the Denpasar
District Court today.
In the court's verdict, a judge panel
headed by Amser Simanjuntak, concluded that Sandiford has damaged the image of
Bali as a tourism destination and weakened the government's programme of drug
annihilation.
The cocaine she smuggled was worth around
2.5 million US dollars, the Associated Press reported.
Prosecutors had said during the trial last
month that they were seeking a 15-year prison term, and not persuing the
maximum penalty for drug trafficking that is death.
Sandiford previously told
the court she became involved only because "the lives of my
children were in danger".
In her witness statement, she said:
"I would like to begin by apologising to the Republic of Indonesia and the
Indonesian people for my involvement.
"I would never have become involved
in something like this but the lives of my children were in danger and I felt I
had to protect them."
During the trial Sandiford's lawyer read out a
statement from her son, which said: "I love my mother very
much and have a very close relationship with her.
"I know that she would do anything to
protect me. I cannot imagine what I would do if she was sentenced to death in
relation to these charges."
Three other Britons were arrested at the
same time as Sandiford in a sting operation.
Julian Ponder and Rachel Dougall were
accused of being involved in the same smuggling operation. Paul Beales was also
detained.
At the time of her arrest, Dougall, who
has a young daughter, insisted she was the victim of a "fit-up" and
Ponder claimed he was "trapped".
Ponder's lawyer claimed he was told that
Sandiford was delivering a present for his child's birthday and, when he met
her to receive the gift, police officers arrested him.
A verdict is expected in the trial of
Ponder tomorrow.
He is accused of receiving the drugs in
Bali, which has a busy bar and nightclub scene where party drugs such as
cocaine and ecstasy are bought and sold between foreigners.
Indonesia has an estimated 114 prisoners
on death row.
Most of the more than 40 foreigners among
them have been convicted of drug crimes, according to a March 2012 report by
Australia's Lowy Institute for International Policy.
Five foreigners have been executed since
1998, all for drug crimes, according to the institute.
There have been no executions in the
country since 2008, when 10 people were put to death.
Sandiford's MP said he would seek to raise
her sentence with Foreign Secretary William Hague during Foreign Office
Questions in the House of Commons this morning.
Martin Horwood, Lib Dem MP for Cheltenham,
in Gloucestershire, where she previously lived, said the sentence came as a
shock to a lot of people, as Indonesian prosecutors had not sought it.
"The days of the death penalty ought
to be past. This is not the way that a country that now values democracy and
human rights should really be behaving," he told BBC News.
"I imagine all those who know Lindsay
will be extremely worried and concerned about this development.
"When the prosecutors asked for
something less than the death sentence, for a custodial sentence, then I guess
I'm afraid some of us perhaps relaxed a little and this has come as a real
shock that the judges have actually delivered a sentence which is obviously
much, much harsher than the one that was actually requested by
prosecutors."
He added: "I will be seeking to raise
it (with William Hague) and to ask for him to reiterate Britain's long-standing
opposition to the death penalty and to really say that Indonesia's progress
towards democracy and human rights is one that we celebrate but this is
completely out of step with that process."
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