Thursday, 14th November 2024

Australian drug convict Schapelle Corby returns home from Bali

She has always maintained her innocence

Monday, 29th May 2017

Australian drug convict Schapelle Corby (R) is escorted by police in Bali. ©Antara Foto/Nyoman Budhiana/via REUTERS
By Harry Pearl

Convicted drug smuggler Schapelle Corby arrived in Australia yesterday after completing a twelve-and-a-half-year sentence for smuggling marijuana to Indonesia.

Her case received huge media attention and soured ties between the two countries.

Corby landed at Brisbane International Airport with her sister Mercedes Corby and a bodyguard just after 5am local time, Australian media reported.

She did not leave the airport through the usual exit, evading a large media contingent waiting for her, before being whisked away in a black van with tinted windows.

Family spokeswoman Eleanor Whitney thanked Corby’s supporters and asked for privacy.

“It is with gratefulness and relief we mark Schapelle Corby’s return to Australia,” she said, reading from a statement.

Enormous domestic resonance

Corby has always maintained her innocence, saying she was unaware she was carrying more than 4kg (8.8lb) of marijuana in a boogie board bag when she arrived in Bali in late 2004.

Her story captivated Australia, hogging headlines and prime time television for months, and initially putting strain on diplomatic ties between Australia and Indonesia.

Corby’s case and that of the so-called Bali Nine, who were arrested in 2005 on charges of smuggling heroin from Indonesia into Australia had enormous resonance as a domestic political issue in Australia.

Bali Nine ringleaders Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran were executed in 2015 and, under Indonesia's strict drug laws, Corby could have faced the death penalty for trafficking.

Indonesia’s justice system was vilified in parts of the Australian media, while the Indonesian embassy and officials were sent death threats, including bullets and a white powder in an envelope in 2005.