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Bali Nine members could continue sentences in Australia, as PM urged to explain deal

Kerobokan prison, Bali
The remaining Bali Nine members would continue to serve their sentences in Australia, a Labor minister says, as the Opposition calls on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to "stand up and explain" the deal.

Talks are underway to return members of the so-called Bali Nine drug smuggling ring to Australia, the federal trade minister has confirmed.

But he asserted that they would continue to serve their sentences and not be released.

The Australians were arrested in 2005 for attempting to smuggle heroin out of the Indonesian resort island.

Five remaining members Scott Rush, Matthew Norman, Si-Yi Chen, Martin Stephens and Michael Czugaj are serving life sentences in Indonesia for their involvement.

A member of the nine, Renae Lawrence, was released from prison in 2018 while Tan Duc Than Nguyen died of cancer the same year.

The execution of two of the group's ringleaders, Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, in 2015 caused a diplomatic rupture between Australia and Indonesia.

Bali Nine members 'would continue to serve sentences'


Trade Minister Don Farrell said discussions were ongoing but confirmed the Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had advocated on behalf of the Australians.

The prisoners would continue to serve their sentences in Australia under the proposal, he told Sky News on Sunday.


"The proposal isn't, as I understand it, to release these people," Farrell said.

"They would continue to serve their sentence, except they're serving them in Australia."

Albanese raised the prisoner issue during a meeting with Indonesia's President Prabowo Subianto on the sidelines of the APEC Summit in Peru, Australian Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones told reporters on Saturday.

Under the deal, Jakarta would seek the repatriation of Indonesian prisoners held in Australia, the country's Law Minister Supratman Andi Agtas told the Reuters news agency on Saturday.

Jakarta has no set procedures regarding international prisoner transfers but would work on the matter as soon as possible, Supratman said, stressing the counterpart country must recognise Indonesia's judicial process.

"This is important to maintain a good relationship with friendly countries but this is also in our interest because we have prisoners abroad," he said.

'Stand up and explain'


Opposition legal affairs spokesperson Michaelia Cash urged the prime minister to "stand up and explain" the potential deal.

"Let's be clear, in the first instance, these individuals, Australians, were part of a heroin-smuggling ring to bring back into Australia, in excess of eight kilos of heroin," she told Sky News on Sunday.

"Drug offences are some of the worst offences our society sees because of the devastating consequences on people, including death."

She called on the prime minister to confirm how the deal had been brokered, whether there would be a cost to the taxpayer, and whether they would continue to serve their full prison sentences in Australia.

" And if not, why not?" she said.

Source: sbs.com.au, AAP, Reuters, SBS, November 24, 2024

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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."

— Oscar Wilde



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