INDONESIA: DEATH FOR DRUGS NOT A DETERRENT

11 June 2012 :

Indonesia’s top narcotics official said that the use of the death penalty for drug offenses does not deter the use of drugs, smuggling or distribution in the country.
Gories Mere, the head of the National Narcotics Agency (BNN) argued that would-be smugglers and criminals do not appear to be deterred by the use of the death penalty in drug-related crimes in Indonesia.
“They’re always trying to delay their execution by asking for a remission or pardon,” Mere said on the sidelines of preparations for next week’s 29th International Drug Enforcement Conference in Bali, in comments published by The Jakarta Globe.
He said that despite the increased use of the death penalty, drug crime in the Southeast Asian nation has increased nearly three times in the past two years.
A similar increase had also been flagged by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, which said it had recorded three times as much smuggling of amphetamine stimulants and a doubling in marijuana and heroin smuggling cases.
There are more than 250 Indonesians now detained overseas for drug-related offenses, mostly in China and Malaysia, Gories said.
However, Meres did not say whether the government would push to end the death penalty against drug criminals in the country.
 

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