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Indonesia gives 72-hour execution notice to drug traffickers

JAKARTA, Indonesia - Indonesia notified nine foreigners and a local man convicted of drug trafficking that their executions will be carried out within days, ignoring appeals by the U.N. chief and foreign leaders to spare them.

JAKARTA, Indonesia - Indonesia notified nine foreigners and a local man convicted of drug trafficking that their executions will be carried out within days, ignoring appeals by the U.N. chief and foreign leaders to spare them.

Authorities also asked the four Nigerian men, two Australian men, a Filipino woman, and one man each from Brazil, France, and Indonesia for their last wish, the spokesman for the attorney general, Tony Spontana, said Sunday.

He said the legal options of nine of them have been exhausted, while Frenchman Serge Atlaoui still has an outstanding legal complaint over the procedure followed in his request for clemency. Spontana said he expects the Supreme Court to rule on it Monday.

The 72-hour notice indicates the executions by firing squad in Besi prison on Nusakambangan Island will be carried out at the earliest on Tuesday or Wednesday.

The pending executions have caused an international outcry, particularly in Australia, France, and the Philippines, which are opposed to the death penalty.

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon urged President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo to "urgently consider declaring a moratorium on capital punishment in Indonesia, with a view toward abolition."

French President Francois Hollande has warned of diplomatic consequences if Atlaoui is executed, and said Saturday that there could be possible economic fallout as well.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, whose government has been pressuring Indonesia to spare the two Australians, arrived on a visit to Paris on Saturday night and was expected to discuss the situation with Hollande.

Australian heroin traffickers Andrew Chan, 31, and Myuran Sukumaran, 33, were the ringleaders of a gang of nine Australians arrested in April 2005 while trying to smuggle more than 18 pounds of heroin from the resort island of Bali to Sydney.

Philippine President Benigno Aquino III said Sunday that he would again appeal the case of Filipino convict Mary Jane Veloso to Jokowi when they meet at an annual summit of Southeast Asian leaders in Malaysia on Monday.

The Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila issued over the weekend Veloso's handwritten letters from her Indonesian prison where she pleaded to Aquino and other officials to continue efforts to save her. She repeated that she was tricked by a compatriot into carrying illegal drugs in a luggage as she traveled in the hope of landing a job as a house helper.