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Indonesia | Briton faces death penalty for trafficking a kilogram of ecstasy in Bali

A British man is facing the death penalty for allegedly dealing a kilo of MDMA in Bali.

Thomas Parker was seen for the first time since his January arrest on Thursday, paraded in front of media in an orange jumpsuit in Denpasar.

The 32-year-old could face a firing squad if he is found guilty of trying to push the 1.055kg of Class A drugs police say they recovered in a mail package.

MDMA is the main component in the party drug ecstasy.

Parker was arrested outside an Airbnb in January, but the case went unreported until authorities showed the Brit shaven and handcuffed at a press conference yesterday.

He was processed along with other suspects facing drug charges on March 6.

Authorities claimed that officers had noticed him 'acting suspiciously' while collecting a package from a motorcycle taxi driver on January 21, before his arrest. 

Police approached Parker, who allegedly discarded the package in panic and fled the scene. He was traced back to the 7 Seas Villas in North Kuta, where he was arrested.

Police showed the discarded package to Parker, who allegedly admitted it was the package he had received earlier. 

They claimed they had found a light-brown powder inside later identified as MDMA.

Officers also allegedly seized a mobile phone.

Police took the suspect to the narcotics office for processing back in January, and he has been remanded in custody since. 

He will now be charged with the importation, trafficking, and possession of drugs.

If found guilty of the alleged offences, Parker could be sentenced to death under Indonesian law, as his charges comprise of multiple drug offences. He remains in custody.

Thomas' phone and other belongings kept inside sealed plastic bags were also presented to be used as evidence.

Brigadier General Rudy said: 'After conducting a search and arrest, Thomas and the evidence were taken to the Bali Province National Narcotics Agency office for investigation.'

The narcotics agency chief said that Thomas was a member of an international drug dealer organisation based in Hungary.

He added: 'He was ordered by his boss to pick up a package in Bali after flying from Thailand.

'The parcel contained MDMA which is illegal and punishable by death.'

Thomas was remanded in custody and will be kept behind bars during the investigation. 

He could be sentenced to the death penalty if he was proven to dealing the drugs.

However, Balinese authorities are still trying to identify the sender of Thomas' package and will interrogate him, with the option for a lighter sentence if he cooperates.

The drugs were later publicly burned by authorities in an incinerator.

In Indonesia, MDMA, the main component of ecstasy, is classified as a Class I narcotic.

For quantities under five grams, offenders are jailed for between five and 15 years. For quantities exceeding five grams, the law permits the imposition of the death penalty.

Indonesia has zero-tolerance drug policies. Last month, three British nationals were arrested for allegedly smuggling cocaine into the resort island.

While last year, nine tourists were arrested in Bali following a police raid on a suspected drug-fueled party disguised as a Christmas and New Year event.

However, the country has taken a more lenient approach in recent months due to international pressure.

In December 2024, the final five members of the Bali Nine - who were convicted of trying to smuggle 8.3kg of heroin out of Indonesia in April 2005 - were released from jail and flew back to Australia. 

The masterminds of the drug plot, Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, were executed by firing squad in 2015 on Nusa Kambangan or 'Prison Island'. 

The five remaining men spent years condemned to an institutionalised existence in which they were told when and what to do, where to go and if they were allowed to speak. 

Newly-freed Martin Stephens begged at the time of the 2015 executions of ringleaders Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan: 'Just take me out the back and shoot me.'

A despairing Stephens said that if there was no hope of release or redemption, it was more humane to execute him.

'Isn't 20 years a bad enough penalty? But life means no hope. It means I will die in prison. Can you imagine having to live like that?

'When I think about waking up like that every day, I think it would be better if they took me out the back and put a bullet in the back of my head.'

Stephens would wait another nine years to walk from prison at the age of 48.

Separately, a British man accused of smuggling cocaine into Indonesia was pictured in another parade in Bali last month. 

A 32-year-old suspect and his girlfriend, 35, were reportedly caught carrying packs of the hard drug through the I Gusti Ngurah Rai International Airport in Bali, on February 1.

Officers halted them at the X-ray machine after finding 'suspicious' items in their suitcases.

They were pulled to a separate area, where staff found the narcotics sealed in blue plastic packages labelled 'Angel Delight' in the man's luggage. More cocaine was found in seven plastic bags in his partner's suitcase.

Police said they seized 994.56 grammes of cocaine worth an estimated six billion IDR (around £296,000).

A third British suspect, 35, was later detained as part of the investigation. He had reportedly been due to meet the couple to collect the drugs.

The trio, along with other arrested drug suspects, were paraded in front of local media on February 7. 

Source: Mail Online, Max Alred, March 7, 2025




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


Comments

  1. I really do not understand persons trying to deal with drugs in these countries known for their death sentences for drug related crimes. Its almost like their asking to be executed.

    ReplyDelete

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