This is a matter of unclear polling and the politics of advantage. Nothing more.
ABC’s youth radio station Triple J has been implicated in the decision to execute Australian drug smugglers Andrew Chan and Myruan Sukumaran.
In a tragic turn of events, a program run by Triple J to humanise Australian drug smugglers Andrew Chan and Myruan Sukumaran, is now being used by Indonesian politicians to justify their execution.
And many are asking whether the radio station has acted irresponsibly.
Last week, Triple J’s Hack program ran a story to gauge the public’s opinion on whether or not convicted Bali 9 drug smugglers Chan and Sukumaran should be executed for bringing heroin into Indonesia.
I was listening in that afternoon. It was a powerful program.
Host Tom Tilley and guest Ben Quilty did an excellent job at humanising both Chan and Sukumaran for the audience. They managed to change the minds of many listeners. Minds certain the pair should pay the ultimate price for their crime.
Read more:Radio Station faces part of the blame for impending Bali 9 executions.
Now in an opportunistic grab by Indonesian ministers and diplomats, a poll that Tilley referenced at the start of the program has been used to justify denying the pair clemency.
Attorney General H.M Prasetyo said: “We have heard that many Australians support the execution and it is one of the things that pushes us to feel we are not making a mistake.”