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Bali bombers will not appeal for clemency: report
Sat Oct 13, 2007 3:52am EDT

By Telly Nathalia

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Three Indonesian militants on death row for their
involvement in planning the Bali bombings five years ago said on
Saturday they were ready to die and would not seek a presidential pardon.

Imam Samudra, Amrozi and Mukhlas, also known as Ali Gufron, were
sentenced to death for the October 12, 2002 resort island bombings in
which over 200 people died. They face execution by a firing squad
after the country's top court rejected their appeal.

"Clemency is not from Islamic law. I have been living as a Muslim and
will die as a Muslim," state news agency Antara quoted Imam Samudra as
saying after Eid al-Fitr prayers at their prison mosque on
Nusakambangan island in Central Java.

"Clemency is only proposed by guilty people and we are not among the
guilty people," he said. "Even were we to die right now, God willing,
we will enter heaven as martyrs."

The three men have already said in a statement read by their lawyers
that they will not seek a presidential pardon and that if they are
executed, their death will bring "light to the faithful and burning
hellfire for the infidels".

Indonesia's Constitutional Court is expected to rule on October 30 on
a petition challenging the legality of the death penalty which was
filed by lawyers for six Australians on death row for drug trafficking
in Bali.

It is not clear if a decision in favor of the petition would affect
the fate of the Bali bombers.

Hundreds of activists, religious leaders and other Indonesians have
signed a petition calling on the government to scrap the death penalty
altogether.

"Various studies show that the death penalty has no deterrent
effects," said a statement by the Alliance for the Abolition of the
Death Penalty.

Signatories includes leaders of Indonesia's main religions, Islam,
Christianity, Hinduism and Buddhism.

Amnesty International has also appealed to Indonesia to commute all
death sentences and spare the Bali bombings trio.

"Executions can create martyrs whose memories become a rallying point
for their organizations," Amnesty said in a statement.

The bombings in Bali and other attacks that have hit Indonesia in
recent years have been blamed on the Southeast Asian Islamic militant
group Jemaah Islamiah.

But analysts say the security threat from Jemaah Islamiah (JI) appears
to have been contained.

"The threat from JI is much less than it was five years ago," said
Sidney Jones, Southeast Asia director of the International Crisis
Group think-tank. "JI still exists as an organization but most of its
members aren't interested in bombing."

The last big bomb attack in Indonesia was over two years ago when
three Islamic militants blew themselves up in beachside restaurants in
Bali, killing 20 people.

© Reuters 2006. All rights reserved.



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