Two Britons accused of smuggling cocaine into Bali have been paraded and handcuffed together by police, as they face the prospect of the death penalty if convicted.
Kial Robinson, 29, and Piran Ezra Wilkinson, 48, both from Chichester, in West Sussex, were photographed at a press conference today at Indonesia‘s National Narcotics Agency office in Denpasar.
Dressed in orange prison uniforms, the pair kept their heads down as they were seen shackled together with other inmates at the agency.
Robinson, who owns a landscape gardening business, according to documents filed to Companies House, was arrested after being stopped at Bali’s International Airport with a package allegedly containing cocaine found in his backpack.
The Daily Mail understands he boarded a Turkish Airlines flight from Barcelona and arrived on the island on September 3.
He claimed he was offered $10,000 to peddle the drugs and was told to give them to someone who would come to a villa in Mengwi, Badung, near Canggu, according to sources.
Wilkinson, who is listed on Companies House as a property manager, was arrested at a villa in the early hours of September 4.
On Monday, there was no answer when The Daily Mail visited the £320,000 semi-detached house where Robinson’s gardening business is registered.

The pair accused of smuggling cocaine into Bali have been paraded and handcuffed together by police, as they face the prospect of the death penalty if convicted

Dressed in orange prison uniforms, the pair kept their heads down as they were seen together with other inmates at the agency in Indonesia

Kial Robinson, 29, (pictured) was arrested this week at Bali International Airport for allegedly trying to smuggle 1.3kg of cocaine into Bali

Robinson owns a landscape gardening business, according to documents filed to Companies House
Convicted drug traffickers, especially those caught with large quantities, have in the past been executed by firing squad in Indonesia – including foreign nationals. If the quantity is large but not enough for the death penalty, life in prison is a common sentence.
The Agency’s spokesperson, Made Dwi Saputra, only confirmed that two British nationals had been arrested.
At the time, he said the arrest would officially be announced in a press conference on Tuesday.
He also added: ‘On Tuesday, we will carry out a modest ceremony to destroy some narcotic evidence, as well as a press release on several cases.’
A spokesperson for the Foreign Office told The Daily Mail: ‘We have been made aware of two British nationals who have been detained in Bali. We continue consular support for both and are in contact with the local authorities.’
In July, three Brits who had been warned they faced the death penalty for smuggling drugs into Bali hidden in Angel Delight packets were let off with just a one-year prison sentence.
The Indonesian court instead gave 12-month prison terms to the three British nationals, all from Hastings and St Leonards-on-Sea in East Sussex, who had been accused of drug running on the resort island.
Jonathan Christopher Collyer, 38, and Lisa Ellen Stocker, 39, were arrested on February 1 after being stopped at Bali’s international airport with 17 packages of cocaine that weighed nearly a kilogram, according to public court records.

A spokesperson for the Foreign Office told The Daily Mail: ‘We have been made aware of two British nationals who have been detained in Bali.

Robinson claimed he was offered $10,000 to peddle the drugs and was told to give them to someone who would come to a villa in Mengwi, Badung, near Canggu,

The Daily Mail understands Robinson was arrested at Bali International Airport (file image) on September 3 after arriving on a Turkish Airlines flight from Barcelona
They appeared in court alongside Phineas Ambrose Float, 31, who was allegedly due to receive the packages from them and was arrested a few days later in February.
The trio appeared in distinctive white and red prison uniforms before a panel of judges at Denpasar District Court.
Presiding judge Heriyanti declared that all three suspects had violated article 131 of Indonesian Narcotic law – but said he was reducing the sentence because they had admitted their offences and had behaved ‘politely’.
All three defendants stated that they accepted the verdict and would not file an appeal. The time served since their arrest in February will count towards their sentence, meaning they should be released early next year.
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