A powerful letter from the mother of Myuran Sukumaran.
This morning a mother will wake heartbroken. She will rise and dress knowing that she is about to face the unthinkable. Knowing that she must go through what no mother should. In a separate house another mother will rise. Feeling the same pain. The same anger, the same anguish.
Today, Helen Chan, the mother of Andrew Chan buries her son. Her now friend Raji Sukumaran buries her son tomorrow.
Together they know their sons lives were taken for politics and show, not for good. Together they know their sons lives could have been spent helping others rehabilitate but instead they were shot after midnight in a paddock in Indonesia.
Together they know that their sons lives were wasted. And today, one of the mothers speaks out.
No matter what your thoughts about the crimes their sons committed it would be hard to find a person who does not feel for the anguish the families of Sukumaran and Chan are enduring.
After 10 years on death row Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan were put to death last week on the Indonesian island of Nusakambangan for attempting to traffic heroin.
Today sees the funeral for Andrew Chan, tomorrow is Myuran Sukumara’s funeral.
She writes: “As human being, I can’t even understand how you could sign a person’s death without looking into their personal circumstances. If you do not read what you are signing how can you know whether the life you are taking belongs to someone who is mentally unwell, or an old man in a wheelchair, or young mother with two children, or a father of two, or a man who has been in your prison for 17 years, or a gospel singer, or two young boys who made foolish mistakes.”
Top Comments
strange that a man that ordered 7 people to death didn't even have the guts to be there to see his orders carried out. He should have had to pull the trigger himself.
Of course not but they don't order people to murder others do they.
To much Game of Thrones for you
I have been terribly conflicted about this whole thing. On 1 hand, I don't support state sanctioned murder, but on the other I sometimes feel that we have become so sanitised by paltry penalties for serious crime here in Australia (despite widespread calls for change) that we baulk at other nations taking such extreme action. I have also been conflicted because of what I believe a fundamental hyprocrisy in how Indonesian law is applied for their citizens and non-citizens alike which is appalling.
As a mother, my heart goes out to the Chan and Sukamaran families as they have been collateral damage in this. As a mother, I would fight with my last breath to save my child as they have done and I completely respect that.
Having said that Lets stop trivialising this with " I hope your children / family don't make a mistake" - this is BS. I have made mistakes in my lifetime (and possibly will make more), I have no doubt that my 2 teenage daughters will, as will / have my siblings, cousins and my young niece and nephew. However, something that constantly stress to my children (when talking about boundaries and permissible freedom) is that my job is to make sure they grow up to make wise choices and if they make a mistake, it won't be one that defines or alters the course of the rest of their lives.
Yes Chan and Sukamaran made a mistake but this mistake was a life changing one for everyone concerned. Sadly the reality is that not every mistake can be healed or washed over with a "I'm sorry" and perhaps being cavalier or arrogant in their youth or with a sense of invincibility from having successfully trafficked drugs on prior occasions without detection, they found out the hard way that some mistakes don't come with the I'm sorry option and they've paid for this with their lives.
I would like to think that this may be the cautionary tale for any young Australian seeking to make a quick buck through selling drugs but sadly for some, the lure of easy money will overpower any level of sense. And in that moment, the individual won't give a second thought of the hell they will enter into of which their innocent families will also follow to save them.
It will only be a matter of time before this happens again and that makes me really sad and I sincerely hope I'm wrong.