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UN human rights office calls Indonesia executions ‘incomprehensible’

Priest and nuns pray next to the coffin of executed Brazilian drug convict Rodrigo Gularte at the hospital morgue in Jakarta on April 29, 2015. Indonesia on April 29 staunchly defended its execution of seven foreigners including two Australians as a vital front of its "war" on drugs as testimony emerged of how they went singing to their deaths. BAY ISMOYO/AFP/Getty Images

BERLIN – The U.N. human rights office has criticized Indonesia’s decision to execute eight people convicted of drug smuggling.

The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights says Indonesia asks for clemency for its own nationals facing execution in other countries, “so it is incomprehensible why it absolutely refuses to grant clemency for lesser crimes on its own territory.”

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READ MORE: Indonesia executes 8 for drug offences, leading to international outrage

A spokesman for the Geneva-based body, Rupert Colville, said in a statement Wednesday that “it is extremely regrettable, extremely sad that these people have been deprived of their lives.”

He said that international law only permits the death penalty for the most serious crimes such as murder.

Two Australians, four Nigerians, a Brazilian and an Indonesian man were executed simultaneously at 12:35 a.m. Tuesday by a 13-member firing squad.

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