Mother pleads for daughter's release

The Dublin-based mother of a pregnant British woman who faces execution by firing squad if convicted of drug smuggling in Laos…

The Dublin-based mother of a pregnant British woman who faces execution by firing squad if convicted of drug smuggling in Laos has appealed for his daughter’s release.

Jane Orobator (40), a student at Trinity College Dublin, said her 20-year-old daughter Samantha Orobator from London has been in jail since last August after she was allegedly caught with 680 grammes of heroin by customs officers at the country’s Wattay airport.

In Laos, smuggling more than 500 grammes of heroin carries a mandatory death sentence.

Ms Orobator, who lives with her other three daughters in Castleknock, said she had no idea why her daughter was in Laos last summer and was shocked when to hear of her arrest in late September.

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She said the case is totally out of character for her daughter, who she described as a quiet, shy, small-built girl who looks like a young teenager.

"I'm just down on my knees. They should please have mercy," she told Sky Newstoday. "No one has been allowed to see her, she has no legal representative."

Ms Orobator, who is studying to be a psychiatric nurse, appealed to the British government to intercede on her daughter’s behalf with the Laotian authorities, to have her daughter released.

“I just want them to bring her back to me. I’m really terrified. I have been crying my eyes out.”

When Ms Orobator moved to Dublin eight years ago, she left Samantha in London to live with her aunt. She last saw her daughter in Christmas 2007 and last heard from her in July when she was on holiday in Holland with friends.

British legal charity Reprieve said Samantha, who fell pregnant in December while in Phonthong prison, could face trial next week and, if found guilty, could be executed.

A lawyer from the charity traveled to the Asian state yesterday after permission was granted to meet Samantha tomorrow.

British authorities have only been able to visit her for a period of 20 minutes, once a month. Officials only learned of Ms Orobator's arrest when she had already spent many months in jail.

The spokeswoman for Britain's Foreign Office said officials had not been able to establish when a trial would take place.

Bill Rammell, a junior minister in the Foreign Office, would raise the issue of Orobator's detention in a meeting with the Laotian deputy prime minister next week, she said.

Additional reporting by PA