Waikato Times

Kiwi crims should do time in NZ - lawyer

- MATT STEWART de

"If you offend in another country you must be held to account in that country.''

Justice Minister Andrew Little

New Zealand should be working to allow internatio­nal prisoner transfers to bring Kiwi criminals home and out of harsh jails in countries with inhumane or immature criminal justice systems, a leading human rights lawyer says.

Transnatio­nal human rights lawyer Craig Tuck represents Whanganui man Antony de Malmanche who in 2015 was sentenced to 15 years in jail for drug traffickin­g in Indonesia.

As of October 2017, de Malmanche is one of at least 163 known Kiwi prisoners in overseas jails, figures released by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade under the Official Informatio­n Act show.

New Zealand remains the only country in the OECD that has not signed an internatio­nal treaty for the transfer of prisoners – neither the Government nor its officials can intervene in the justice system or courts of foreign countries, or resolve immigratio­n violation decisions.

Tuck visited de Malmanche in Bali’s notorious Kerobokan prison in October as he tries to figure out a way to bring his client home to serve out his sentence.

The lawyer is calling for a standardis­ed protocol in dealing with internatio­nal prisoner transfers and sees no reason why Kiwis should not be brought back home to serve their sentences, near their families ‘‘in humane conditions fitting of a modern democracy’’.

Just months after de Malmanche arrived in Kerobokan two inmates were killed as gang violence erupted.

Former inmates have described the prison as overcrowde­d, understaff­ed, drug-filled, lawless, corrupt and brutally violent.

Built in 1979 to hold 300 inmates, Kerobokan now houses 1500 male and female prisoners from around the world, some of whom are on death row.

Conditions inside the prison, which houses murderers, rapists and paedophile­s, were harsh.

Tuck described Malmanche’s cell as a ‘‘broom cupboard’’ that could reach 40 degrees Celsius at night.

But at least he had a cell – many prisoners slept rough in the prison grounds with nothing but chilly bins for water and sanitation and portable stoves to cook food.

Tuck said de Malmanche was low-key and had been keeping busy as a kind of jail pharmacist, taking it upon himself to deliver prisoners – many of whom had mental health issues – their daily medication­s in his morning ‘‘drug run’’.

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