29 May 2012

Briton faces death penalty over Bali drugs ‘smuggling’

A British housewife could face the death penalty after being arrested in Bali over a £1.6m cocaine haul.

Lindsay Sandiford, 55, was caught with 4.8kg of the drug stuffed in the lining of a suitcase as she arrived in Bali, according to customs officials.

After her arrest on the Indonesian island last week she reportedly agreed to take part in a sting operation in which police swooped on four other suspects, arresting another British woman, two British men and an Indian man.

The head of Bali’s drugs squad, who goes by one name, Mulyadi, said the two British men, identified by the initials BP and JAP, were believed to be senior figures in a major drug-smuggling syndicate. “It’s an international network controlled from abroad”, the Australian Associated Press news agency reported Mulyadi saying.

Hiding her face

Sandiford, originally from Redcar, Teesside, is thought to have told police that she only agreed to make the smuggling trip because her children in England were being threatened.

She was paraded at a press conference alongside the drugs, wearing an orange prison T-shirt and hiding her face from cameras.

Masked armed officers in Kuta, a town on the holiday island, flanked her as she was brought into the room and a customs official cut open packages wrapped in brown tape to reveal a white powder.

Sandiford, listed on immigration documentation as a housewife, was stopped as she arrived at Bali’s Ngurah Rai International Airport on a Thai Airways flight from Bangkok, Thailand, on May 19, according to customs official Made Wijaya.

Two days after her arrest she was contacted by the second British woman, identified by the initials RLD, at which point a meeting was arranged.

Mr Wijaya said at the press conference: “After weighing, the total cocaine is 4.791kg.”

Death penalty

The drugs have an estimated street value of 23.9 billion Indonesian rupiah (£1.6m), he said.

Indonesia has extremely strict drug laws, and the official said Sandiford was likely to face charges that carry a death penalty.

He said: “This is a big international network. The charge against them would carry the death penalty.”

Another 68g of cocaine, 280g of powdered ecstasy and a small amount of hashish were also seized following the arrest of the other gang members at separate locations in Bali, officials said.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: “We are aware of the arrest in Bali, and we stand ready to provide consular assistance.”