Guardian News Service/London

Officials from the Philippines arrived in Indonesia on Wednesday to discuss a case against drug traffickers that they hope can prove Mary Jane Veloso was tricked into smuggling heroin and save her from a firing squad.
Veloso, a former domestic worker, was given a temporary reprieve by Indonesian President Joko Widodo just hours before she was due to be executed in April. Eight men were killed by firing squad that day.
Her alleged trafficker had handed herself in to the police in Manila, and Philippines President Benigno Aquino made a last-minute appeal on the basis that Veloso would be needed as a witness in the case against her alleged recruiter.
“Primarily we are updating the Indonesian government on progress made in the case of Mary Jane Veloso,” Filipino department of foreign affairs (DFA) spokesperson Charles Jose told the Guardian.
Veloso says she was tricked by the trafficking gang to bring 2.6kg of heroin to Indonesia from Malaysia five years ago.
The DFA said in a statement that its officials would be joined by officials from the department of justice in a trip that it described as “part of the DFA’s continuous commitment to provide assistance to Mary Jane Veloso”.
Philippines justice secretary Leila de Lima has set up a special task force to investigate the drug traffickers, which could prove the argument made by her supporters that Veloso is a victim of human trafficking, not a drug trafficker.
Key to the last-minute reprieve was that the Philippines invoked a regional treaty signed to fight transnational crimes in south-east Asia.
The Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) obliges countries to help each other fight crime outside their borders - in this instance, by keeping alive a key witness in a potential human trafficking case.
Jose said officials in Jakarta “will also explore how we can use MLAT in our investigation”.
Veloso, a former domestic worker who fled Dubai after an attempted rape, has drawn widespread sympathy from the Indonesian public.
An online petition with more than 430,000 signatures says Veloso is from a poor area in the north of the Philippines. It said the single mother of two sons was seeking employment and had no idea heroin was in the lining of her suitcase.
Indonesia has some of the toughest anti-drugs laws in the world. Since Widodo took office, 14 drug convicts have been executed. Most of them were foreigners.
Capital punishment was outlawed in the Philippines in 2006.

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