Sons to reunite with Filipina on death row

Sons to reunite with Filipina on death row
Updated 23 April 2015 22:16
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Sons to reunite with Filipina on death row

Sons to reunite with Filipina on death row

MANILA: The two young sons of a Philippine maid on death row for drug trafficking in Indonesia will fly out Thursday for a feared final reunion, the government said as it mounted a last-ditch campaign to save her.
Mary Jane Veloso, 30, is facing imminent execution for drug trafficking along with a group of other foreigners as Indonesian President Joko Widodo presses on with his war on illegal drugs. The Philippine government has paid for Veloso's sons, aged 6 and 12, and her mother to fly to Indonesia, said foreign department spokesman Charles Jose. They will join Veloso's father and sister who are already in Indonesia. The family plans to spend a week with her as the government pursues every means possible to have her death sentence commuted, Jose said.
"We are exhausting the remedies open to us and we will continue to pursue both the legal track, which is the appeal for judicial review, and the diplomatic track, which is the appeal for clemency," Jose told reporters.
Philippine vice president Jejomar Binay is in Jakarta this week for an Asia-Africa summit and is spearheading the government's efforts to save Veloso, who insists she was duped by an international drug syndicate.
On Wednesday he delivered a letter appealing for clemency to the Indonesian government from President Benigno Aquino.
Binay also hoped to meet Widodo this week to make a direct appeal.
A second appeal for the Indonesian courts to reconsider the conviction is being prepared, according to Jose and the National Union of People's Lawyers, which has been assisting in Veloso's case.
The petition, which is expected to be filed on Monday, will argue that Veloso was a victim of human trafficking and that she is not a drug smuggler, said the union's assistant secretary-general, Ephraim Cortez.
Veloso was caught at Yogyakarta airport in 2009 with 2.6 kilogrammes (5.73 pounds) of heroin sewn into the lining of her suitcase.