Bali Nine ‘Black Sheep’ pleads for mercy
The media curtain-raisers for
Indonesian President Joko Widodo’s visit to Australia focused on trade and
visas. Human rights activists were
hoping the agenda might include the fate of the five surviving Bali Nine. One is
Martin Stephens.
The convicted
Australian Bali Nine drug mule fears he’ll die inside an Indonesian jail unless
President Widodo orders clemency.
Stephens
claims he can do more good in the community warning of the dangers of drugs
than being held as an example of the Indonesian government’s war on drugs.
In 2011
Stephens appealed for his life sentence to be dropped to ten years arguing he’s
contrite, will never re-offend and wants to help rehabilitate others. The appeal was rejected.
“I did
wrong,” he said in the Malang (East
Java) prison. “It was my
big mistake. I’m asking for a second
chance. I’d never been convicted before of any crime.
“I’ve
been locked up for almost 15 years. My wife
and daughter are struggling. (He married Indonesian Christine Puspayanti
in 2011.)
“My
parents in Australia
are doing it hard because of me. I want
to care for them. Why should they keep
paying for my first fault? What’s served by keeping me behind bars? I want to be a good citizen and contribute.
”I’m borderline
autistic. That caused problems when I
was a kid. I was an angry boy but never
a bully. I stood up for others. My best friend was my talking cockatoo
Charlie.
“Now I’m
more mature. I’ve learned the hard way. I got out of my depth. I’m hard on myself. I’ve always taken
responsibility for my mistakes. I’m
proud of that.”
Stephens,
now 43, was a bartender in Wollongong when
recruited by the infamous Bali Nine gang attempting to smuggle 8.3 kilograms of
heroin worth about AUD 4 million to Sydney
through Denpasar’s Ngurah Rai airport.
The eight men and one woman were snared in a 2005 joint Indonesian
Police and Australian Federal Police (AFP) operation.
In 2015
the alleged ringleaders Andrew Chan
and Myuran Sukumaran were executed. Renae
Lawrence was sentenced to 20 years. She
was released and deported in 2018.
Vietnamese-Australian
Tan Duc Thanh Nguyen was given life imprisonment. He died of stomach cancer in 2018.
Stephens is the only member of the surviving five outside Bali. He was
shifted from Bali’s Kerobokan Jail to Malang with Nguyen in
2014. At the time it was widely reported
the men were sent to East Java because they’d
‘violated prison rules’.
Stephens denies this vigorously: “I asked to be moved to be closer
to my wife and apart from the others. I
don’t want to know them. I wasn’t in
their syndicate which made earlier drug runs. I’ve always been known as the
Bali Nine black sheep.”
Former Foreign Minister Julie Bishop unsuccessfully proposed
prisoner swaps when Chan and Sukumaran faced the firing squad. Australia does not have the death
penalty.
Stephens said he’d reject an exchange unless compelled: “I’m much freer here than I would be in an
Australian jail, though logically it would be better for my parents.
“I’m the only white Western Christian among about 3,000
prisoners and I’m treated well. Malang has different
rules. It’s one hundred per cent better
than Kerobokan.
“I have no complaints about the Australian government and
the AFP which saved my life. If I’d been
caught in Sydney
and confessed the drug syndicate would have had me killed. (Some prisoners’ relatives have criticized
the AFP for tipping off their Bali counterparts so arrests were made in Indonesia which
has harsher penalties.)
“Consular staff are good.
They visit regularly and I get a monthly allowance of AUD 125 which I’ll
have to repay if released.
“I teach English and play the seruling (traditional bamboo flute) but I haven’t learnt
Indonesian. I want to keep my Australian
identity and avoid getting involved in faction fighting.”
Apart from skin sores which are being medicated, Stephens
looks physically healthy, striding through crowds of shuffling prisoners like a
man with purpose. He says his family and
faith sustain him, though he criticizes church “hypocrites” who promise to help
but don’t deliver.
Although he gets distressed recounting his life he says he’s
never contemplated suicide: “That’s not me. I couldn’t do that to my parents. I love them too much.
“So many lies have been told about me. No-one sees your
struggles – only your errors. Doesn’t everyone deserve a second chance?”
Townsville Catholic Bishop Tim
Harris has been publicly appealing for mercy for the five prisoners. Two (Scott Rush and Michael Czugaj) were former parishioners.
He’s visited them in Kerobokan.
“It’s ludicrous that the surviving
Bali Nine are in prison,” Bishop Harris said.
“(They) were mules … This is a hard road for them and their families.
“I pray for them frequently but I’m powerless really to get
our government to up the ante and talk with Indonesia accordingly. I fear that
the Bali Nine are a bad dream for our government but that is not good enough.
“These people were so young and are still young. Surely they’ve done their time and learnt
their lesson? Bring them home I say. Justice has been served and now mercy must
be applied.”
First published in Pearls and Irritations 10 Feb 2020: https://johnmenadue.com/duncan-graham-bali-nine-black-sheep-pleads-for-mercy/
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