Eight convicted drug smugglers have been executed by firing squad in Indonesia.The executions took place in Besi prison on the island of Nusakambangan early on Wednesday morning local time.However, the execution of a ninth convict, a woman from the Philippines, was postponed at thelast minute.Among those killed were Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran. Earlier, the men's families were allowed to see them for the last time.Australia had appealed to Indonesia to delay the executions, citing alleged flaws inhow their case was prosecuted.After the executions, Steven Ciobo, parliamentary secretary to Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop, tweeted: "There are few greater displays of abuse of state power and regressive thinking than the death penalty."Those put to death also include Nigerian nationals, a Brazilian and an Indonesian.Filipina woman Mary Jane FiestaVeloso was also due to be executed, but this was delayed after a request by the Philippine president, a spokesman from the attorney general's office told the BBC.The request came after someone suspected of framing Veloso to carry heroin into Indonesia surrendered to police in the Philippines, the spokesman went on.'A miracle'Indonesia would give Veloso the chance to testify as a witness in the trial in the Philippines, the spokesman said.Her mother described the last minute reprieve as a "miracle"."We are so happy, I can't believe it. I can't believe my child will live," Celia Veloso told Philippine radio station DZMM.A Frenchman also convicted of drug offences, Serge Areski Atlaoui, has also been sentenced to death but has an appeal outstanding.Earlier, the eight prisoners were allowed to spend their final moments with their families.Relatives of Chan and Sukumaranwere visibly distressed and Sukumaran's sister collapsed and had to be carried to the prison.Australia had urged Indonesia to delay the execution of its two nationals until a corruption investigation into their case was complete.Chan and Sukumaran, along with seven other Australians, were arrested in Bali in 2005 for trying to smuggle more than 18lb (8.2kg) of heroin from Indonesia to Australia.The pair were later found to be the ringleaders of the group and sentenced to death. The other seven members of the "Bali Nine" are currently serving either life or 20 years in prison.Indonesia has some of the toughest drug laws in the world and ended a four-year moratorium on executions in 2013.It says it takes a hard line because of the country's own drugs problem - 33 Indonesians die every day as a result of drugs, according to Indonesia's NationalNarcotics Agency.
The highly pronounced power failures across the country in the past few days may worsen following a partial system collapse that occurred on Tuesday, and the continuous drop in electricity generation due to what the government says is the vandalism of pipelines that supply gas to the power plants. As a result, power generation dropped to 1,580.6 megawatts on Wednesday.Data from the Nigeria Electricity System Operator as well as information from senior officials of the different electricitydistribution companies confirmed that power generation plummeted massively on Tuesday and Wednesday. The officials noted that this resulted in the reduction of the electricity load allocated to the Discos, stressing that this was why many parts of the country had been recording blackouts in the past few days.It was learnt that the partial system collapse that occurred on Tuesday happened at the Shiroro Power Plant and dragged down electricity generationto as low as 1,233.4MW from a peak of 3,207.7MW...
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