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Myuran Sukumaran Campaign Information
Name: Myuran Sukumaran

Born: 17 April 1981

Nationality: Australian [Born in London]

Sentence: Currently on DEATH ROW in Indonesia.

Offence: Arrested on April 17, 2005 and found guilty of attempting to import heroin from Indonesia to Australia.

Case Info: Myuran Sukumaran was arrested in Indonesia on his 24th birthday along with eight other Australians now known as the 'Bali 9'. Sukumaran was unknown to Australian police prior to his arrest. He was sentenced on 14 February 2006 by the District court in Bali to receive the death penalty. He is from Auburn, New South Wales [Australia].

Sukumaran was discovered with three Australians in the Melasti Hotel on Bali's Kuta Beach with five mobile phones and 350 grams of heroin. He denied any involvement with the heroin seized at the airport or any heroin located at the premises upon his arrest.

Myuran Sukumaran is currently awaiting the death sentence in Kerobokan Prison's 'Death Row Tower'. FPSS Advocates continue to appeal to the Australian Government to request his immediate transfer to an Australian Correctional Facility where he can receive proper medical treatment and rehabilitation. FPSS oppose the death penalty.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard said the Australian government would oppose any death sentences imposed, saying "We have a long-standing opposition to the death penalty and it's well known that if a death penalty is imposed on an Australian we ask that that death penalty not be imposed."

How you can Help: Myuran would very much welcome letters of support and care packages. If you feel inclined to write then please do at the address below. Normal sized letters and care packages can be sent directly to the prison.

    LPM Kerobokan
    Myuran Sukumaran [Australian]
    Death Row Tower
    Jl. Tangkuban Perahu
    Kerobokan, Denpasar 80117
    Bali, INDONESIA

If you would like to make any financial donation to support Myuran with basic food and essentials then please contact us.

When you write, please be sure to mention that you were given these details by the Foreign Prisoner Support Service. We would also appreciate any feedback you may provide to us, so that we can keep this campaign up to date.

Important Notice
Please be advised that those people sending letters to Kay Danes at Kerobokan Prison should discontinue because she is NOT a prisoner. Rather, Kay Danes is a Prisoner advocate based in Australia. Please do not address any more mail to Kay Danes at Kerobokan Prison, Bali. If you would like to write to her this is the address:

    Kay Danes
    PO Box 391
    Capalaba QLD 4157
    Australia

Visitation:

Prisoners in Kerobokan are allowed visitors everyday except on Sunday. Most love to have a visit from somebody who can look beyond their situation and see them as real human beings. Life in an Asian prison is difficult, and more so when you have no one to help you with even the most basic needs.

Visiting hours at Kerobokan Tuesday to Friday: 9.00am - 12.00 and 1.30pm - 3.00pm (Saturday 1/2 day AM visit only)

List of basic items visitors can bring on a visit day;

  • Financial support is critical for anyone in an Asian jail. If you can spare some local currency [Rupiah] then this would be appreciated. It's best to give your contribution to the prisoner with as much discretion as possible, mainly so other prisoners won't see.
  • Fresh fruit, salads and bread, pizza, roast chicken
  • Aussie foods - sweets, biscuits, health food bars, BBQ sauce
  • Health Drinks, milk, cordial [preferably Raspberry]
  • Reading materials - Newspapers, magazines, comic books, puzzle books, self development books, CD's.
  • Australian Cigarettes [used for bartering]
  • Canned food/rice, fresh vegetables etc…
  • Any of the items below [see care packages].

    Care Package items. Please make sure all items are appropriately packaged and sealed before sending to the prison. Don't forget to include your name and contact details so the prisoner knows who sent these items and where to send a thank you!

  • Reading materials - Newspapers, magazines, comic books, puzzle books, self development books, CD's, postcards;
  • Australian Cigarettes [used for bartering]
  • Toiletries, Toothpaste/toothbrush, soap, shampoo and conditioner, dental floss;
  • Laundry powder [Tip: Sard soap bar is lighter.]
  • Tinea Cream, Dettol, Savlon, Chap sticks [dry lips], cracked heal cream [Tip: sachets], Bandaids, Cotton Buds, Wet ones [refresher towels], ear plugs,
  • Mosquito coils & Repellent [RID]
  • Oil of Cloves [toothache]
  • Cold Sore Cream, lip balm, moisturisers; prickly heat powder;
  • Chux wipes
  • Cotton T-shirts, shorts, singlets,
  • Thongs/flip flops
  • Hats [baseball type caps]

    Tips on visiting at Kerobokan

    If you plan to go to Bali and want a reliable taxi driver who is well known to FPSS and takes very good care of foreigners travelling to Bali, then consider calling Simon on mobile phone number 0817367301 or to arrange prior from mobile in your country (+ 62 817367301). Simon works for the Blue Bird Taxi Group [Call 0361701111] which is considered the safest and most reliable taxi service in Bali.

    Before going to the prison:

  • Photo copy your photograph page of your passport to use at checkpoint.
  • Don't take in any valuables
  • If you have something to sit on ie: a mat, then take it as there is limited seating available.

    At the prison:

  • A donation to enter the jail is expected. 15 000 rupiah. [Roughly 7 000 rupiah = $1 Australian dollar]
  • At the outside through the steel entrance to the left you will see police who will register your name and details. Best you write down the name of the prisoner you wish to visit and state that you are either family or friend.
  • The police will need to check any items that you intend to take inside. Watch this process carefully. Sometimes a share of the item is asked for. Cigarettes are a favourite but the police don't appear to like Australian/Western cigarettes.
  • Make sure you don't have anything in your bag that will compromise a prisoner. Don't take pills, tablets or other medications in purses or handbags. Avoid taking any of these in at all.
  • At the wooden doors, knock and a guard will open the door. Inside on the right is a guard's desk. Here you will present a copy of your passport. Leave your mobile phone, camera here which are retrievable on leaving. Have Rp 5000 ready to pay the guard who is recording your details, and the prisoner's name in a sign on book.
  • The guard then takes your ID etc and gives you the name slip and a plastic card (one plastic card for each visitor in your group - sometimes). A guard will open the large steel door to allow you into the next section. Inside the prison:
  • Once inside Kerobokan prison, you will find a checking room or just a simple wooden desk to the right. Guards here will inspect your packages - if they attempt to take something then be assertive but polite, smile and say "No that is for [name of prisoner] and take it back. They may also go through your handbag etc. They generally do not conduct body searches this is a corner in the room with curtains, if this is demanded.
  • Go straight ahead towards the other steel gate where someone will be waiting to open it. At the same time, you will find drink fellows with mats will appear. Ignore them until you are ready to speak with them. Pick one person to deal with and remember him and get his name. Deal only with this person not several or you will be paying out more rupiah than you need too.
  • Show the guards the prisoners name slip - produce another Rp 5000 and here they perform another check of goods for the prisoner. The brown slip with the prisoner's name will be given to a fellow who goes to the cell to call the prisoner.
  • Meanwhile the drink fellow will be waiting to guide you to someplace in the old garden area now under reconstruction or other visiting area, attempting to make you comfortable with the mat and drinks. Wait for the prisoner to come - usually up to ten minutes unless the prisoner knows before hand.
  • Costs: 1000 for mat, soft drink box (not usually paid for?), 3000 for water, 5000 for soft drink or mizone. It is not compulsory to buy any drinks or use any mats or soft drink box.
  • Sometimes after about half an hour visit, a couple of prisoners will come asking for payment for extra time - usually Rp 1000 will suffice, however it is best to pay rather than argue on the grounds of fairness that you have just arrived or have already paid when you entered for the visit. Seems the more you pay/give the more is demanded. Also it has been known that the prisoner gets hit up for the costs at the end of the visit if not paid. Generally your prisoner will advise you.
  • At the end of the visit, hand in plastic card at the front desk and collect your mobile, camera and passport or copy.
  • On leaving there is a Rp 1000 parking fee to pay.
  • LOBBY AGAINST THE DEATH PENALTY
    "Australia's opposition to the death penalty should be clear and consistent, regardless of the crime, regardless of the country, regardless of the citizenship of the convicted. In a regional context, opposing the death penalty for some crimes but not for others, for some criminals but not our own citizens, opens Australia to charges of hypocrisy and undermines our commitment to the universal abolition of the death penalty." - The Hon. John von Doussa QC, President of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission - 22 October 2006

    For more information contact the Executive Secretary of the Council for Civil Liberties office on 9660 7582 or email us at office@nswccl.org.au

    GOVERNMENT ENQUIRIES
    Australian Consulate-General
    Jalan Hayam Wuruk No 88B
    Tanjung Bungkak
    Denpasar, Bali 80234.
    Email (general enquiries): bali.congen@dfat.gov.au

    Office hours: 0800-1200 and 1245-1600 Monday-Friday.
    Postal address - PO Box 3243, Denpasar Bali
    Telephone - (+62 361) 283011 or 283241

    The Australian Government http://www.australia.gov.au/

    Please note: e-mail correspondence should include your postal address. Responses will not be made via e-mail.

    The Embassy of the Republic of Indonesia
    8 Darwin Avenue
    Yarralumla, ACT 2600
    AUSTRALIA
    Phone : (+61 2) 6250 8600
    Fax : (+61 2) 6273 6017

    Update 10 April 2007
    FPSS Support Continues for Australians detained on Death Row [Bali]
    Thank you to everyone who has offered support to the families of; and to the Australians currently on death row in Indonesia. We appreciate your concerns and would like to reaffirm our committment to this campaign. We are doing all that we can to generate positive support to the campaigns in the hope that the Indonesian Government will show some leniency to these young Australians. We hope that they might be spared the death sentence, and transferred back to an Australian prison where they would have access to appropriate levels of medical care, family support and proper rehabilitation.

    Please find below a brief update on our main efforts...

    1. FPSS are in contact with the Legal Representatives currently launching a Constitutional Challenge in Indonesia. We have taken advice from them in how best we can support those on death row and have pledged support to all future campaign strategies in accordance with their advice.

    2. FPSS advocates are continuing to lobby Australian Government Members of parliament in Canberra to ensure the concerns of our members are known to the Australian Government.

    3. FPSS letters of appeal have been sent to various Indonesian Government members. These have respectfully appealed for mercy on behalf of those on death row.

    4. FPSS have continued to advise other lobby groups and human rights committees on the various ways of proceeding to ensure the integrity of the campaign is maintained.

    5. FPSS advocates are in close and direct contact with the Australians on death row in Bali and are fully compliant with their wishes.

    6. FPSS advocates are continuing to provide practical support where possible to the families and to the prisoners themselves. WE also advise visitors to our site on how they can support the Australians detained in Bali, how to write letters, how to send care packages, how to assist financially. We are pleased to hear that over the past twelve months, a large number of FPSS members have even travelled to Bali and made direct contact with the Australians and are continuing that support.

    7. FPSS are maintaining good relations with various media groups interested in these cases and ensuring that the information provided to them is accurate, appropriate and condusive to the current legal strategies in place and requests by family/prisoners.

    8. FPSS continue to maintain positive relations with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade [DFAT] and Attorney General's Office in the interests of maintaining the appropriate level of integrity to this campaign effort. We are pleased to report that DFAT are working extensively to provide a high level of consular support. Feedback from some of the Australians who have written to us recently, is that they are very happy with the level of consular support provided to them, understanding the difficulties of their situation.

    Rest assured that FPSS are doing everything possible to support the Australians detained in Bali. FPSS do not condone drug trafficking or illegal actions of any persons. FPSS does not condone the use of the death penalty. The death penalty is the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment. It violates the right to life. Click Here for the ForeignPrisoners.com Death Penalty Page

    The information contained on this website is not to be copied to any other sites and/or used without permission of FPSS. This campaign page and the information contained herein has been approved by the detainee with the expressed request that the information only appear on the FPSS website and no other site. The reason for this is to provide assurances that the information remains accurate and to protect the integrity of the campaign, again at the request of the detainee. All material herein in subject to copyright and any breech will result in the appropriate action.
    FREEDOM IS A RIGHT OF ALL HUMAN BEINGS IN A WORLD WHERE LIFE IS VALUED AND PEACE MAY FINALLY BE A POSSABILITY
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