Police in Indonesia arrest Australian man for allegedly smuggling cocaine into Bali
The Southeast Asian country has extremely strict drug laws and convicted smugglers are sometimes executed by firing squad.
Authorities in Indonesia have arrested an Australian man for allegedly smuggling cocaine on the tourist island of Bali, a charge that could carry the death penalty, officials have said.Lamar Aaron Ahchee, 43, from Cairns in north Queensland, was arrested last Thursday after police raided his rented house near Kuta beach, a popular tourist spot, and seized 1.7 kilograms of cocaine in 206 plastic bags, along with a digital scale and a mobile phone, Bali Police Chief Daniel Adityajaya said.The arrest followed an investigation conducted by Bali Police anti-drug surveillance teams who reported the man had received two suspicious packages sent by mail from England, Adityajaya said."He is suspected of importing or distributing class one narcotics," Adityajaya said at a news conference in the provincial capital, Denpasar."He is threatened with the death penalty or life imprisonment."Adityajaya said a preliminary investigation showed that the Australian had ordered a motorcycle taxi driver through the Grab online service on 21 May to pick up two packages at a post office in Denpasar.The driver was told to hand the two packages to a motorcycle taxi driver from another online service, who was ordered to deliver them to Ahchee's rented house, Adityajaya said.Adityajaya said the suspect told authorities during a police interrogation that he was asked by someone he referred to as "Boss," to take the package and distribute it in Bali.Dealer or user?He was promised 50 million rupiah (€2,660) for handling the cocaine.On Monday, police presented the accused at the news conference where he was wearing an orange detainee jumpsuit and a mask, with his hands handcuffed.The man did not make a statement.One of his lawyers, Edward Pangkahila, said his team would accompany his client during the police questioning "to see the progress of the investigation.""He is not the owner of the cocaine, he is just a user," Pangkahila said, "The police must be able to chase and arrest the person who is acting as his boss, to reveal this case fairly."The Southeast Asian country has extremely strict drug laws and convicted smugglers are sometimes executed by firing squad.The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says Indonesia is a major drug-smuggling hub despite having some of the strictest drug laws in the world, in part because international drug syndicates target its young population.On Tuesday, Denpasar District Court handed a 10-month prison sentence to Thomas Parker, a British national who was arrested in January after he collected a package containing drugs from a motorcycle taxi driver.Indonesian authorities arrested an Argentinian woman and a British man in March for allegedly smuggling 324 grams of cocaine on Bali.About 530 people, including 96 foreigners, are on death row in Indonesia, mostly for drug-related crimes, the Ministry of Immigration and Corrections' data showed.