http://arabnews.com/saudiarabia/article605913.ece


22 death-row inmates exonerated, repatriated to Indonesia

By RIYADH: GHAZANFAR ALI KHAN

Published: Apr 5, 2012 23:37 Updated: Apr 5, 2012 23:37

Twenty two death row Indonesian inmates in the Kingdom have been exonerated and 
repatriated back to Indonesia, while 25 maids are still facing death sentences 
in Saudi Arabia for various offenses.

“Jakarta will be sending a 14-member presidential task force to the Kingdom on 
April 7 to talk to Saudi officials and to intensify efforts in cooperation with 
its embassy to rescue the maids,” said Hendrar Pramutyo, spokesman of the 
Indonesian embassy in Riyadh, on Thursday.

Pramutyo said: “Six housemaids are on death row in Riyadh province alone, 
whereas about 19 female workers have been handed death sentences in the Western 
region. We will be attending a court hearing in Dammam next week.”

He added many other workers may not be so fortunate. However, the embassy as 
well as the Jeddah-based consulate are working hard to secure pardons for the 
workers, he added.

Such problems are limited to a few countries, he noted.

According to a report published in Indonesian newspaper The Presidential Post, 
a total of 167 Indonesian nationals are on death row, and 11 others had also 
been sentenced to death in different countries including Saudi Arabia recently. 
Most Indonesian nationals sentenced to death had committed either serious 
criminal offenses or implicated on baseless grounds.

Some 117 are in death row in Malaysia, 20 in China, 25 in Saudi Arabia, and two 
in Singapore. They can always be acquitted if these countries find them not 
guilty or a royal pardon is granted, said Pramutyo.

To this end, the spokesman noted the Indonesian government is committed to 
saving the lives of its citizens. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono announced 
last week an extension to the tenure of the special taskforce handling 
Indonesian migrant workers.

Asked about the total number of convicted workers currently languishing in 
Saudi jails, the embassy’s spokesman said a total of 1,700 Indonesians were 
serving prison terms.

“However, thanks to the Saudi government amnesty a large number of them were 
set free and repatriated back to Indonesia,” said Pramutyo. He pointed out the 
Indonesian diplomatic missions are still exerting efforts to secure the release 
of workers in jail for petty crimes.

“We have also asked permission from the host government to allow our 
presidential task force delegation to visit Saudi jails,” said the spokesman, 
adding that he is awaiting a response from the Kingdom.  The presidential task 
force visited the Kingdom on previous occasions, which eventually helped to 
secure the release of some workers and save some of them from execution. 
Indonesia created this special task force in July last year to protect migrant 
workers.

The task force’s members focus on migrant workers facing the death penalty in 
different countries, including Malaysia, China, Saudi Arabia and Iran. On the 
question of manpower deployment from Indonesia to Saudi Arabia, the spokesman 
said that there is a still a deadlock. However, the two sides are in touch with 
each other, he added. The Kingdom has imposed its own boycott on recruitment, 
while Indonesia also decided to maintain its current ban on recruitment 
agencies sending workers to Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria and Kuwait.

Indonesia says these countries have not adopted a legal framework that it 
thinks is sufficient to legally protect its workers and ensure their rights are 
fulfilled.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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