Australian drug mule gets life
Bangkok Post2 Jun 2016
HANOI: A court in southern Vietnam has sentenced an Australian man to life in prison for drug trafficking.
Nathan Andrew James was convicted following a one-day trial by the People’s Court in Ho Chi Minh City this week, a court official said yesterday on condition of anonymity.
James, 34, was arrested in October 2013 while checking in for a flight to Australia after customs officials at the airport discovered 1.5kg of heroin hidden in his luggage.
The indictment said James owed some money to a man named Tim, who offered to write off the debt if James agreed to take the heroin hidden in two suitcases from Vietnam to Australia.
James told the court that he had received the suitcases from the man, but denied that he knew heroin was hidden in them, an explanation that was rejected by the court, the official said.
James could have been sentenced to death, but the court took into consideration his history of mental disorders, she said, without elaborating on his condition.
The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said in a statement yesterday that it has provided consular assistance to a man convicted in Vietnam. It did not name him.
That assistance included attending the court proceedings and visiting the man in prison.
The statement gave no other details, citing privacy obligations.
Vietnam has one of the world’s toughest drug laws, where trafficking 100g of heroin is punishable by death.