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Australia protests reduced sentence for bomb maker in Bali attacks that killed 202

Pair of tourists at memorial to victims of 2002 Bali bombing
Australian tourists pay their respects at a memorial to victims of the 2002 Bali, Indonesia, nightclub bombing that killed 202 people.
(Firdia Lisnawati / Associated Press)
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Australia’s leader on Friday said it was upsetting that Indonesia has further reduced the prison sentence of the bomb maker in the 2002 Bali terrorist attacks that killed 202 people — which could free him within days if he’s granted parole.

The most recent reduction of Umar Patek’s sentence takes his total reductions to almost two years and means that he could be released on parole before the 20th anniversary of the nightclub bombings in October.

“This will cause further distress to Australians who were the families of victims of the Bali bombings,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told Channel 9. “We lost 88 Australian lives in those bombings.”

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Albanese said he would continue making “diplomatic representations” to Indonesia about Patek’s sentence and a range of other issues, including Australians currently jailed in Indonesia. Albanese described Patek as “abhorrent.”

“His actions were the actions of a terrorist,” Albanese told Channel 9. “They did have such dreadful results for Australian families that are ongoing, the trauma which is there.”

Indonesia often grants sentence reductions to prisoners on major holidays such as the nation’s Independence Day, which was Wednesday.

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Three men held at the Guantanamo Bay detention center have been formally charged in the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings and other plots in Southeast Asia.

Patek received a five-month reduction on Independence Day for good behavior and could walk free on parole this month from Porong Prison in East Java province, said Zaeroji, who heads the provincial office for the Ministry of Law and Human Rights.

Zaeroji, who goes by a single name, said Patek had the same rights as other inmates and had fulfilled legal requirements for sentence reductions.

“While in the prison, he behaved very well, and he regrets his radical past which has harmed society and the country, and he has also vowed to be a good citizen,” Zaeroji said.

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Patek was arrested in Pakistan in 2011 and tried in Indonesia, where he was convicted in 2012. He was originally sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment.

Islamic State militants dubbed ‘the Beatles’ because of their British accents killed several captives, including two Americans who were beheaded.

With his time served plus sentence reductions, he became eligible for parole Sunday.

The decision from the Ministry of Law and Human Rights in Jakarta, the Indonesian capital, is still pending, Zaeroji said. If refused parole, he could remain jailed until 2029.

Patek was one of several men implicated in the attack, which was widely blamed on Jemaah Islamiyah, a Southeast Asian militant group with ties to Al Qaeda. Most of those killed in the bombing on the resort island were foreign tourists.

Another conspirator, Ali Imron, was sentenced to life in prison. Earlier this year, a third militant, Aris Sumarsono, whose real name is Arif Sunarso but is better known as Zulkarnaen, was sentenced to 15 years following his capture in 2020 after 18 years on the run.

Jan Laczynski, a survivor of the bombings, told Channel 9 that many Australians would be “devastated” by Patek’s potential release.

“This guy should not be going out unsupervised, unmonitored,” he said.

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