Prosecutors seek life sentence for remorseful Patek
The
accused Bali bomber's life should be spared because he regrets his actions and
has co-operated with investigators, prosecutors told the West Jakarta District
Court.
Prosecutors on Monday (May 21st) said accused Bali bomb maker Umar Patek
should spend the rest of his life in jail, but stopped short of seeking the
death penalty because they said he had been co-operative and shown remorse.
"We are recommending that Umar Patek be given a life
sentence," prosecutor Bambang Suharyadi said.
Patek, on trial for his alleged role in the 2002 Bali
bombings and a spate of attacks on Christian churches two years
before that, repeated his apologies
during his appearance at West Jakarta District Court on Monday.
"I regret what I have done... (and) I apologise to the families of
victims who died -- Indonesians and foreigners," said Patek, addressing
the victims, their families, the people of Bali, the Christian community, and
the local and national governments. "I apologise also to victims who were
injured."
According to Bambang, the defendant should be found guilty of
premeditated murder and the use of explosives to commit acts of terrorism,
among other charges.
The bombings claimed 202 lives and had a devastating impact on the local
people, the prosecutor said, adding that they were rooted in an erroneous
interpretation of Islam.
"Patek's actions, which were motivated by a wrong teaching, caused
long and deep suffering among Balinese society," he said.
However, he added, Patek has acknowledged a role in the attacks and
co-operated throughout the judicial process.
"On the top of that, he also regretted his involvement and
apologised to the victims and their family in front of the public,"
Bambang added.
When his trial
began in February, prosecutors said they would seek the death
penalty. Imam Samudra and brothers Amrozi and Ali Ghufron, three key figures in
the 2002 bombings, were convicted and executed by firing squad in November
2008.
Terrorism expert Noor Huda Ismail said it was important that Patek
remain alive because of the information he could still yield, according to AFP.
"Patek is an encyclopedia of information on the who's who of
al-Qaeda in Southeast Asia," said Ismail, executive director of the
Institute for International Peace Building in Jakarta.
"Unlike the executed Bali bombers he showed remorse, meaning
there's little chance he will try to plan future attacks from jail. He can also
be used as a figure to speak out against terrorism," he said.
Patek is accused of being the expert bomb maker for the Jemaah Islamiyah
terror network. Once the most wanted terror suspect in Indonesia, he spent
nearly a decade on the run but was captured in January 2011 in Abbottabad, Pakistan,
where al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden was holed up.
During his trial he denied playing a
major role in the Bali attacks, saying he only helped mix explosives
but did not know how they would be used.
The
trial will resume on May 28th, when Patek's lawyers will read his defense. A
verdict is expected June 21st.

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