Angelita Muxfeldt, a cousin of jailed Brazilian Rodrigo Gularte, is fighting to halt his execution
Rodrigo
Gularte spends much of his days conversing with an absent person, alone in his
cell. His fellow prisoners believe he talks to ghosts.
Black
magic is greatly feared in Indonesia and most inmates avoid the 42-year-old
Brazilian - one of a minority of foreigners held on the prison island of Nusa
Kambangan in Central Java province.
But
according to doctors, the ghosts he talks to are in fact voices inside his
head.
Gularte's
sanity has steadily deteriorated since being sentenced to death in 2005 for
smuggling 6kg of cocaine into the country, sealed inside surfboards.
Last
year his family, assisted by the Brazilian embassy, arranged for a group of
specialists to evaluate his mental health. Psychological assessment reports
seen by Al Jazeera show that after visiting him twice monthly between July
and November, they concluded he was suffering from paranoid
schizophrenia.
"Now
Rodrigo lives in an unreal world," his cousin Angelita Muxfeldt says.
"He was first diagnosed with depression and bi-polar disorder when he was
16, but he's never accepted treatment or medication. So it's very
difficult."
Most
pertinent among his delusions is that Indonesia has abolished the death
penalty.
"He
doesn't believe he could die. One of the voices tells him he will be extradited
and that he will go home," Muxfeldt says, speaking to Al Jazeera by
phone from Cilacap town, near the prison where Rodrigo is being held.
But
this is not true.
New
Indonesian President Joko Widodo, best known as Jokowi, has made executing drug
convicts - particularly foreign nationals - a policy priority since taking
office in November.
Between
1999 and 2014, 27 people were executed, an average of fewer than two executions
per year. But within Jokowi's first 100 days in office in January, Indonesia
executed six people - the highest number in the previous six years.
A
further nine are expected to be put to death in the coming days or weeks,
including Gularte.
12-man firing squad
Andrew
Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, the alleged lead members of the "Bali
Nine" - a drug-smuggling syndicate caught attempting to take 8.4kg of
heroin out of Bali in 2005 - were moved to the Nusa Kambangan prison facility
in recent days, along with convicts from France, Ghana, Nigeria, the
Philippines and Indonesia.
At
an imminent but undisclosed date, they will be taken from their cells in the
middle of the night, led to a jungle clearing, and shot to death - each by a
separate 12-man firing squad.
The
Brazilian embassy has made efforts to have Gularte's life spared, but relations
with the Indonesian government have been strained since fellow Brazilian Marco
Archer Cardoso Moreira was executed last month for smuggling cocaine.
President
Dilma Rousseff withdrew her ambassador and refused to acknowledge Indonesia's
new ambassador, Toto Riyanto, after reports that Moreira was dragged crying
from his cell, and was refused religious counsel in his final moments.
It
seems all that stands between Gularte and a similar fate is the conclusion of a
small team of psychiatrists sent by the Indonesian attorney general's office to
assess his condition last Tuesday.
To
save the Brazilian's life it is vital that his illness be recognised. In
accordance with Article 44 of the Indonesian penal code, a person who has a
mental disorder cannot face sentencing. Executing anyone suffering from mental
illness is also prohibited under international law.
'They'll think I'm crazy'
But
Muxfeldt is concerned the state-appointed psychiatrists who came to visit
her cousin were only given two hours to evaluate him.
She
says during her cousin's consultation he refused to admit to hearing voices and
did not understand he was talking to a doctor.
"I
said to Rodrigo 'why didn't you tell them?'" she says, her voice cracking
with frustration. "And he said 'no, if I tell him that then they'll think
I'm crazy.'"
The
attorney general's office could not be reached for comment by the time of
publication, but has reportedly said there
remains "uncertainty" over Gularte's mental health.
The
Ministry of Justice and Human Rights could also not be reached for comment.
Regardless
of the eventual decision, rights campaigners say that from the beginning
Gularte's treatment has demonstrated the calamity of Indonesia's legal system.
"Rodrigo
has been mentally ill since he was a teenager," says Haris Azhar,
coordinator of Kontras, a Jakarta-based human rights NGO. "You cannot try
a mentally ill person, and the court failed to establish that he had a mental
condition. These are major failings. He does not speak Indonesian, he did not
have a lawyer - you cannot claim that he faced a fair trial."
Tales
of corruption and incompetence abound on every tier of Indonesian law
enforcement, and concerns remain over the use of the death penalty in a system
that consistently fails to deliver justice.
Rights
advocates say it is because of a lack of a proper legal process that Gularte's
mental instability only now is being brought to light. And if the courts fail
to acknowledge Gularte's condition, there may be little hope for him.
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