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Indonesia sentences UK woman to death over drugs

By FIRDIA LISNAWATI | Associated Press 24 mins ago

BALI, Indonesia (AP) An Indonesian court sentenced a British grandmother to

death on Tuesday for smuggling cocaine worth $2.5 million in her suitcase onto

the resort island of Bali even though prosecutors had sought only a 15-year

sentence.

Lindsay June Sandiford, 56, wept when judges handed down the sentence and

declined to speak to reporters on her way back to prison, covering her face

with a floral scarf. She had claimed in court that she was forced to take the

drugs into the country by a gang that was threatening to hurt her children.

Indonesia, like many Asian countries, is very strict on drug crimes, and most

of the more than 40 foreigners on its death row were convicted of drug charges.

Sandiford's lawyer said she would appeal, a process that can take several

years. Condemned criminals face a firing squad in Indonesia, which has not

carried out an execution since 2008, when 10 people were put to death.

A verdict is expected in the trial of Sandiford's alleged accomplice, Briton

Julian Anthony Pounder, next Tuesday. 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. Two other British

citizens and an Indian have already been convicted and sentenced to prison in

connection with the bust.

The British embassy said in a statement that it was in contact with London to

discuss the next step in providing legal assistance to Sandiford. It said the

United Kingdom "remains strongly opposed to the death penalty in all

circumstances."

Martin Horwood, a member of Parliament representing Sandiford's Cheltenham

constituency in western England, called the sentence a shock and said he would

raise the case with Foreign Secretary William Hague.

"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,"

Horwood told the BBC.

Harriet McCulloch of human rights charity Reprieve, which is assisting

Sandiford, urged the British government to support her appeal.

"Lindsay has always maintained that she only agreed to carry the package to

Bali after receiving threats against the lives of her family," McCulloch said.

"She is clearly not a drug kingpin she has no money to pay for a lawyer, for

the travel costs of defense witnesses or even for essentials like food and

water."

In its verdict, a panel of Denpasar District Court judges concluded that

Sandiford had damaged the image of Bali as a tourism destination and weakened

the government's drug prevention program.

"We found no reason to lighten her sentence," said Amser Simanjuntak, who

headed the judicial panel.

Prosecutors had been seeking a 15-year prison sentence for Sandiford, who was

arrested in May when customs officers at Bali's airport discovered 3.8

kilograms (8.4 pounds) of cocaine in the lining of her luggage.

State prosecutor Lie Putra Setiawan told reporters that the verdict was

"appropriate," explaining that prosecutors had been demanding 15 years because

of Sandiford's age.

Indonesia has 114 prisoners on death row, according to a March 2012 study by

Australia's Lowy Institute for International Policy. Five foreigners have been

executed since 1998, all for drug crimes, according to the institute.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has granted clemency to four drug offenders

on death row since he took office in 2004.

The most publicized recent case internationally is that of Schapelle Corby, an

Australian convicted of smuggling marijuana in 2005. Her 20-year sentence was

reduced last year and she is now eligible for parole, but she remains

imprisoned.

___

Associated Press writer Jill Lawless in London contributed to this report.