‘Please don't hang her’

Muhammad Shafee Abdullah, right, and Tania Scivetti, lawyers for Emma Louise L'aiguille, speak during a press conference at the High Court in Kuala Lumpur.

Muhammad Shafee Abdullah, right, and Tania Scivetti, lawyers for Emma Louise L'aiguille, speak during a press conference at the High Court in Kuala Lumpur.

Published Aug 2, 2012

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Sydney -

The mother of an Australian woman facing the death penalty in Malaysia for trafficking drugs begged for her daughter to be sent home alive on Thursday, protesting that she was innocent.

Emma Louise L'Aiguille, 34, was charged in a Kuala Lumpur court this week with trafficking methamphetamines after she was arrested allegedly in possession of one kilogramof the drug two weeks ago.

L'Aiguille, a nurse from Melbourne, made a tearful court appearance on Tuesday and her mother, Amanda Innes, said she had conveyed a “Mum, I'm sorry, I didn't do it” message back to Australia through consular officials.

“I felt shocked and numb when I was told,” Innes told News Limited newspapers of learning that her daughter faced death by hanging if convicted.

“I don't want her to be (hanged), and the thought of that just terrifies me.”

Innes appealed directly to the Australian and Malaysian governments to intervene.

“Please don't hang her,” she said. “I just want her to be brought home alive.”

Innes said her daughter was a “strong girl, but she was also very fragile”.

“I'm not sure how she'll cope. I still don't think it's hit me, I can't get my head around it,” she added.

L'Aiguille is alleged to have been driving the car the drugs were found in, and one of her two male passengers Anthony Esikalam Ndidi, from Nigeria, has also been arrested and charged.

The second male, her boyfriend, is yet to be found.

Drug trafficking carries a mandatory death sentence by hanging in Malaysia, where hundreds of people are on death row, mostly for drug offences, including Australian Dominic Bird, who was arrested in March.

Since 1960, more than 440 people have been executed in Malaysia, including two Australians put to death in 1986 for heroin trafficking - the first Westerners to be executed under tough new anti-drug laws.

A spokesman for Foreign Minister Bob Carr stressed that it was “too early to speculate” on the outcome of the case, with hearings yet to begin and a verdict a long way off.

“Australia opposes the death penalty and our views are well known to Malaysian authorities,” he said. - Sapa-AFP

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