Indonesia agrees to transfer Filipina death row drug convict to the Philippines

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(FILES) Filipina drug convict and death row prisoner Mary Jane Veloso, clad in traditional Indonesian attire, smiles during a programme celebrating Kartini Day in honour of Indonesian national heroine and women's rights activist Raden Kartini at Yogyakarta prison on April 23, 2016. A Filipina sentenced to death in Indonesia on drug charges will be handed over to the Philippines following years of negotiations, President Ferdinand Marcos said on November 20, 2024, calling it a "long and difficult journey". (Photo by SURYO WIBOWO / AFP)

Filipina drug convict and death row prisoner Mary Jane Veloso was arrested with 2.6kg of heroin in 2010.

PHOTO: AFP

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A Filipina convicted of drug trafficking, who was nearly executed by firing squad in Indonesia in 2015, will finally return to the Philippines after years of negotiations between the two South-east Asian neighbours.

Former domestic helper Mary Jane Veloso, a single mother of two, is “coming home”, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr said on social media platform X on Nov 20.

The Indonesian authorities detained her after discovering 2.6kg of heroin apparently hidden behind the lining of her luggage in April 2010. She was sentenced to death in October the same year.

Veloso, 39, has maintained her innocence from the beginning, saying the drugs had been planted.

Mr Marcos said: “After over a decade of diplomacy and consultations with the Indonesian government, we managed to delay her execution long enough to reach an agreement to finally bring her back to the Philippines.”

He thanked Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto for “goodwill”, adding that Veloso’s transfer shows that Manila and Jakarta are “united in a shared commitment to justice and compassion”.

Indonesia allowed Veloso’s return to the Philippines under the condition that the Philippine government recognises her drug trafficking conviction and that she serves the remainder of her sentence in her home country, Indonesian Coordinating Minister for Law, Human Rights, Immigration and Corrections Yusril Ihza Mahendra said in a statement.

The Philippines will also have to pay for Veloso’s travel back home.

“This is a novel and unprecedented option. I do not know at this time any existing protocol where a foreign national serving a death sentence in another country is being transferred to the home country to serve that sentence,” Mr Edre Olalia, Veloso’s lawyer, told The Philippine Star newspaper on Nov 15, when it was first announced negotiations were under way to possibly transfer Veloso to Manila.

Family members of Mary Jane Veloso during a protest in front of the Department of Foreign Affairs headquarters in Manila, in 2015.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Manila is eyeing clemency for Veloso, Philippine Foreign Ministry official Eduardo Jose de Vega told reporters. But her date of return has yet to be announced.

Veloso’s story mirrors the plight of many Filipino migrant workers abused by their recruiters.

She was born to a poor family in Nueva Ecija province, north of the capital Manila, and once worked as a domestic helper in Dubai to provide for her two sons.

When her contract ended, Veloso returned to the Philippines and later met job recruiter Maria Cristina Sergio, who offered her a similar job in Malaysia in early 2010.

But upon Veloso’s arrival in Kuala Lumpur, Sergio told her the job was no longer available and instead offered her a domestic helper posting in Indonesia. Sergio bought Veloso new clothes and a suitcase, as the migrant worker had travelled from Manila with only a small backpack.

Since her arrest in 2010, the Philippine government has assisted Veloso in appealing for judicial reviews and clemency, but all efforts were denied.

She was set to be executed by firing squad in April 2015, but then Indonesian President Jokowi Widodo granted Veloso an 11th-hour reprieve following a last-minute plea by then Philippine President Benigno Aquino III.

Mr Aquino told the Indonesian leader on the night of Veloso’s scheduled execution that her recruiter Sergio had surrendered to the police and admitted to being part of a human-trafficking syndicate targeting migrant workers.

Sergio is currently in a Philippine prison while a local court continues to investigate the case.

Veloso’s reprieve came so close to her scheduled execution that some Philippine newspapers pre-emptively reported she had been killed.

Mr Marcos said: “Mary Jane’s story resonates with many: A mother trapped by the grip of poverty, who made one desperate choice that altered the course of her life. While she was held accountable under Indonesian law, she remains a victim of her circumstances.”

Indonesia finally agreeing to Veloso’s return is an achievement of Philippine diplomacy and a sign of stronger diplomatic ties between Manila and Jakarta, ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute visiting senior fellow Aries Arugay told The Straits Times.

He added that Mr Widodo’s strong anti-crime policy had prevented this outcome from happening sooner.

Migrant workers’ rights group Migrante International thanked all those who stood by Veloso and campaigned to spare her life, arguing that she was a victim of human trafficking.

“We were all part of this long journey and contributed greatly to this victory,” Migrante said in a statement.

Veloso had been scheduled to be executed in April 2015 alongside eight others convicted of drug crimes unrelated to hers, including Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran.

Despite objections from the prisoners’ home countries, which included Brazil, France, Ghana and Nigeria, Indonesia executed the eight individuals by firing squad.

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