Philippines to bring home Mary Jane Veloso drug convict from Indonesia, eyes clemency

November 21, 2024 - 11:42 AM
123
Mary Jane Veloso holds a sampler she worked on from prison, where she has kept herself busy doing crochet and embroidery for various items that she then sells. She showed her work to DSWD Assistant Secretary Aleli B. Bawagan who was tasked to visit her in Wirogun Prison in Indonesia to personally check on her condition in November 2016. HANDOUT PHOTO FROM OSEC, DSWD
  • Plan is to grant Veloso clemency -foreign ministry
  • No timeline yet for Veloso’s return
  • Mother worried for her safety in the Philippines

 A Philippine woman spared execution in Indonesia on charges of drug trafficking in 2015 will return home after years of negotiations between the Southeast Asian neighbors, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr said on Wednesday.

Mary Jane Veloso, a domestic helper and mother of two, was arrested in the city of Yogyakarta, for carrying 2.6 kg (5.73 pounds) of heroin concealed in a suitcase in 2010.

“Eventually, the goal is not just for her to be transferred, but for our president to … issue clemency,” foreign ministry official Eduardo Jose de Vega told a news conference in Manila, the capital.

Indonesia has not sought anything in return for Veloso’s transfer, the timing of which has yet to be decided, he added.

Veloso will be transferred in December, Yusril Ihza Mahendra, Indonesia’s chief minister for law and human rights, said in a statement.

Veloso was spared from the firing squad at the last minute in 2015, after Philippine officials asked Joko Widodo, then Indonesia’s president, to let her testify against members of a human- and drug-smuggling ring.

The execution of eight other drug convicts went ahead, with Veloso’s reprieve described as a postponement by Widodo, whose presidential term ended last month.

People in the Philippines had held protest vigils and celebrated masses in demonstrations against her execution.

“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,” Marcos said in a statement.

He hailed the neighbors’ shared commitment to justice and compassion, and thanked Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto.

Prabowo’s office said Veloso would serve the rest of her sentence in the Philippines, citing diplomacy and reciprocal partnership in law enforcement as the reason for her transfer.

“We are happy that Mary Jane will be back home,” her mother, Celia Veloso, told radio station DWPM, though adding that the family still worried that international syndicates involved in the case would harm Veloso and their relatives.

Veloso had always maintained her innocence, saying she was an unwitting drug mule for a Philippine employment recruiter. Previously a domestic worker in Dubai, she left to escape an abusive employer, her legal team had said.

Court records say the recruiter asked Veloso to fly to the Indonesian city of Yogyakarta from Manila to hand a suitcase to a man. She was arrested after authorities there discovered heroin wrapped in foil hidden in the lining of her luggage.

Indonesia has harsh anti-narcotics laws and has executed several foreign nationals, including two Australians, who were leaders of the Bali Nine trafficking ring, in 2015.

—Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales in Manila, Stanley Widianto and Ananda Teresia in Jakarta; Editing by Saad Sayeed and Clarence Fernandez