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Moment Bali Nine families found out ON AN April evening in 2005, Raji Sukumaran was busy preparing a huge seafood feast for her son Myuran’s birthday. The lead story on the news was to change ...
The remaining ‘Bali 9,’ the Australians caught smuggling heroin into Indonesia in 2005, are now home, closing a painful chapter in the countries’ relations.
Nine Australians. More than eight kilograms of heroin. A street value of $4 million. It was the international crime that rocked Australia in 2005, and now it looks like the last members of the ...
Madonna King co-wrote a bestselling book about the Bali Nine. The experience left her with strong views about the war on drugs, cross-border policing and the death penalty.
The Bali Nine, made up of nine young Australians, were arrested in April 2005 after attempting to smuggle more than eight kilograms of heroin, worth around $4m, into Australia from Indonesia. A ...
Five members of the so-called Bali Nine drug ring looked on as officials from Indonesia and Australia authorized their transfer to Australian custody, in a photo released by the Indonesian government.
The Bali Nine, made up of nine young Australians, were arrested in April 2005 after attempting to smuggle more than eight kilograms of heroin, worth around $4m, into Australia from Indonesia. A ...
Seven of nine Australian drug smuggling suspects, from left to right, Scott Rush, Myuran Sukumaran, Tanduc Tan Nguyen, Matthew Norman, Andrew Chan, Si Yi Chan and Renae Lawrence. (AP) Sukumaran ...
The five, who were serving life sentences, belong to a wider group of nine who were caught attempting to smuggle more than 8 kilograms (17.6 pounds) of heroin out of Bali’s international airport ...
The Bali Nine dreamed of enough riches to buy flash new cars, pay their university fees and still have cash left over when they were lured into a risky drug smuggling plot.
BALI NINE kingpins Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran’s lies, arrogance and shameless cockiness with Indonesians earned them the death penalty they could have avoided, a new book claims.
The remaining ‘Bali 9,’ the Australians caught smuggling heroin into Indonesia in 2005, are now home, closing a painful chapter in the countries’ relations.