"The European Union is completely opposed to the death penalty. It cannot be the answer to drug trafficking," EU president Donald Tusk said yesterday, adding that he was referring to Serge Atlaoui who lost his final appeal against his death sentence earlier this week.
The Indonesian government said it had ordered officials to make preparations to execute a group of drug convicts, most of them foreigners, amid mounting international criticism.
Ten convicts from Australia, France, Brazil, the Philippines, Nigeria, Ghana and Indonesia will face the firing squad after losing appeals for presidential clemency.
French President Francois Hollande said he "would do everything possible up to the last moment" to prevent Atlaoui's execution.
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"Abolishing the death penalty is for us an absolute principle. For Serge Atlaoui, death cannot be the ultimate sanction," said Hollande after attending an emergency EU summit on migrants in Brussels.
Atlaoui was arrested near Jakarta in 2005 in a secret laboratory producing ecstasy and was sentenced to death two years later.
EU foreign affairs head Federica Mogherini issued a statement earlier yesterday saying the 28-nation bloc was ready to work with Indonesia on drug trafficking.