Death penalty tortures families: Atlaoui

The wife of a man who avoided execution alongside Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan says their families must be supported and remembered.

bali nine

Candles light up photos of eight condemned drug traffickers facing execution in Indonesia, at a vigil in Martin Place, Sydney on April 28, for Bali Nine ringleaders Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran. (AAP Image/NEWZULU/RICHARD ASHEN).

The families of eight people executed in Indonesia in April deserve continued support, as capital punishment means a life-long sentence for them, says the wife of a man still on death row.

Sabine Atlaoui has recalled a terrible three months that began when her husband Serge was named on a list of convicts to face the firing squad alongside Australians Myuran Sukumaran, Andrew Chan and others.

As they were given 72 hours notice of their executions, the Frenchman was removed from the list and able to pursue legal appeals.

Mrs Atlaoui and her family, including a three-year-old child, had spent the weeks before in Cilacap along with the Australian families and lawyers, desperately campaigning to halt the executions.

She told the Asian Regional Congress on the Death Penalty the burden of capital punishment falls to innocent families, who must endure a lifetime of suffering.

"In this context that's highly political, at the end of the day you have to wonder, who is punished?" she said.

"Those on death row who are executed are gone, but what about their families?

"Their parents, their brothers and sisters and cousins, they have to live with the torture and the pain and they have done nothing."

The conference earlier heard about the questionable investigations and trials of the eight people executed, including some who weren't given translators or legal representation, and the case of Brazilian Rodrigo Gularte, who was mentally ill.

Mrs Atlaoui said their families must not be forgotten.

"We've been through the same fate, we suffered the same anxiety, the same fears, the same doubts," she said.

"Today I think of them and I want them to be remembered."

Atlaoui, 51, has protested his innocence since being arrested in a 2005 raid on a factory that was producing ecstasy.

His appeal in the administrative court continues next week.

Australia's Ambassador Paul Grigson, recalled in protest of the executions of Chan and Sukumaran, meanwhile returned to Jakarta this week, after about 40 days absent.


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Source: AAP


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