The Australian Federal Police (AFP) have defended their role in the arrests of the Bali Nine Australian drug gang.
Information
shared by the AFP with Indonesian police in 2005 led to the arrest and
conviction of the gang and the execution of the two ringleaders.
Police have been criticised for reporting the men despite knowing they could face the death penalty.
But senior officers said they were unable to arrest the gang before they left Australia for Indonesia.
Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran were killed by an Indonesian firing squad on Wednesday despite Australian diplomatic pressure.
The AFP will soon be called before a parliamentary committee to explain the decision.
'Fanciful and offensive'
Commissioner
Colvin told a media conference on Monday: "If we had had enough
information to arrest the Bali Nine before they left Australia we would
have done exactly that."
He said the AFP did not know how many
members were in the gang or what drugs they were dealing with, which was
why they contacted their Indonesian counterparts.
He said media reports that the AFP found out about the gang from a
tip-off from the father of one of the gang, were incorrect because the
AFP already knew about the syndicate.
He said also reports the AFP
had "shopped" the gang to Indonesia in a bid to curry favour with
police there were "fanciful and offensive".
However, he admitted
one of the investigating officers asked to be removed from the team
because he was upset about the risk the gang members might face they
death penalty.
Commissioner Colvin also said he could not
guarantee that other Australians caught smuggling drugs in countries
with the death penalty would not suffer the same fate.
He said
police took into account the risk of passing on information, but that
police guidelines said they must also work with foreign police. The case of the Bali Nine
The
eight men and one woman were arrested in April 2005 at an airport and
hotel in Bali, Indonesia after a tip-off from Australian police. They
were trying to carry 8.3kg (18lb) of heroin back to Australia.
In
2006 a court ruled that Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran had recruited
the others and paid their costs. They were sentenced to death and
executed on 29 April.
The other seven are serving sentences of between 20 years and life, after some had death sentences revoked on appeal.
Chan
and Sukumaran had repeatedly appealed against their sentences, saying
they were reformed characters - Chan taught Bible and cookery classes in
prison while Sukumaran became an artist.
'Agonising decision'
Deputy
Commissioner Michael Phelan, who made the decision to share information
with Indonesia, said he worried about it at the time and ever since.
He
said when he made the decision, protecting Australians from drugs was
at the forefront of his mind, not Australia's relationship with
Indonesia.
"If anyone thinks I have not agonised over this for the past 10 years then they don't know me," he said.
Commissioner
Colvin said it was vital Australia worked closely with overseas law
enforcement agencies to tackle trans-national crime.
"It is a hard reality but many of these countries still have a death penalty for these offences," he said.
The AFP receives about 72,000 requests a year via Interpol to share information about suspected criminal activity.
In the past three years, it has received about 250 such requests from
countries that have the death penalty. Of that number, 15 requests from
a range of countries including China were rejected.
Guidelines
setting priorities for how the AFP deals with foreign police were
strengthened in 2009 and include weighing up the value of such
interaction and the risk that suspects could face the death penalty.
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