Schapelle Corby: Islamists protest against parole decision

Updated February 15, 2014 10:09:02

More than 100 Islamic hardliners have protested against the Indonesian government's decision to approve Schapelle Corby's parole from jail, saying she should receive the death penalty.

The convicted drug smuggler was released from prison in Bali on Monday and has since been holed up in the luxury Sentosa Seminyak resort.

On Friday, a crowd of mostly men from the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) and other hardline groups gathered in the capital Jakarta, demanding Corby's parole be revoked.

They said the justice minister "should be ashamed" for green-lighting Corby's freedom.

"This person brings marijuana into our country and is freed? That is simply unjust. Where are our rights?" senior FPI member Haji Awit Masyhuri said.

"She should have been given the death penalty - all drug traffickers should.

He said the Indonesian government had shown special treatment for Corby because she is Australian.

One protester using a megaphone shouted that president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was "bowing down to Australia" by granting Corby a five-year sentence cut in 2012, paving the way for her eligibility for parole.

"Drugs are not our culture. That's Australia's culture. In Indonesia drugs means the death penalty - why did we free her?" the protester shouted, to which others replied "Allahu Akbar" (God is greater), before marching to the presidential palace.

The protesters also repeated past demands that the president issue a decree banning the sale of alcohol, claiming that alcohol consumption leads to increased HIV rates, crime and road accidents.

Corby was arrested in 2004 when customs officials found 4.1 kilos of marijuana in her bodyboard bag.

She served more than nine years in the notorious Kerobokan Prison before being granted parole.

She has always maintained her innocence, claiming the drugs were planted.

Corby must serve out her sentence in Indonesia and will be free to leave in 2017 if she abides by her parole conditions.

Topics: prisons-and-punishment, journalism, federal---state-issues, bali, indonesia, australia, qld, asia

First posted February 14, 2014 23:37:35