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Indonesia

Extradition Law & Case Law

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Case Law
Extradition judicial review refused: Minister not required to assess prima facie case at notice stage
Summary
The High Court of Singapore held that, at the stage of issuing a notice under s. 11(1)(b) of the Extradition Act, the Minister performs a preliminary and limited function. The Minister is not required to determine whether the requesting State has already established a prima facie case against the fugitive, nor to assess conclusively the sufficiency or admissibility of the extradition evidence. Those questions are reserved for the committal hearing before the Magistrate. The Court further clarified that alleged defects in the extradition materials — including issues concerning certification, authentication of documents, production of the arrest warrant, or the form of witness statements — do not automatically render the Minister’s notice unlawful. Such defects may be relevant only if they show that the statutory or treaty conditions for the exercise of the Minister’s power were not met. The applicant must therefore identify a legal defect going to the Minister’s jurisdiction or power, not merely raise evidentiary objections that can be examined at the committal stage. The Court also held that judicial review of the Minister’s notice is subject to ordinary time limits. Time runs from the Minister’s decision to issue the notice, not from later developments in the extradition proceedings. Although an extension of time may be granted where the delay is adequately explained, the applicant must still establish an arguable public law error before leave to commence judicial review can be granted. Finally, the Court rejected the applicant’s detention challenge. Since the argument that the provisional arrest had become unlawful depended on the alleged invalidity of the extradition request and the Minister’s notice, the failure of the judicial review challenge also defeated the application for review of detention. The decision is important because it draws a clear distinction between the ministerial notice stage and the committal stage in Singapore extradition proceedings. It confirms that challenges based on the sufficiency of the requesting State’s evidence should ordinarily be addressed before the Magistrate, while judicial review at the notice stage is confined to genuine public law defects affecting the legality of the Minister’s decision.
29/05/2026 · General Division of the High Court of the Republic of Singapore · [2026] SGHC 118
🇸🇬Singapore → 🇮🇩Indonesia
Procedural orderExtradition
Bail pending extradition refused: “sick or infirm” exception requires conditions not safely manageable in custody
Summary
The case concerned a fugitive arrested in Singapore pursuant to an extradition request by Indonesia in relation to an alleged corruption offence. The requested person applied for bail pending extradition proceedings, arguing that he was “sick or infirm” due to age and multiple medical conditions, and that those words should be given their ordinary meaning. The High Court held that, in extradition cases, the “sick or infirm” exception applies only where the fugitive suffers from a condition that cannot reasonably be managed safely by the Singapore Prison Service. Since the applicant’s conditions were stable and manageable in custody, and since there was in any event a real risk of flight, the Court dismissed the bail application
21/11/2025 · General Division of the High Court of the Republic of Singapore · [2025] SGHC 229 / Criminal Motion No 41 of 2025
🇸🇬Singapore → 🇮🇩Indonesia
Decision on precautionary measureExtradition
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