Neil Bantleman's brother doubts his sibling will work overseas again

'Neil is going to have to think about life and where he goes from here,' says Guy Bantleman

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Caption: Neil Bantleman and wife Tracy Bantleman hold hands after his release from Jakarta's Cipinang prison on August 14, 2015. (Romeo Gacad/AFP/Getty Images)

Free after more than a year behind bars in Indonesia, Neil Bantleman is now taking some time to reconnect with his wife.
"We'll let them have some quiet time for about three or four days and then the team will get together and figure out next steps and if, and when, we can get Neil out of Indonesia and back to Canada," his brother Guy Bantleman told the Calgary Eyeopener on Friday morning.
It's been a whirlwind week for Bantleman's family and friends, who fought hard to keep the former Calgary teacher's story in the limelight since his arrest in July of last year
Bantleman was sent to a Jakarta prison following sexual assault allegations from the parents of a six-year-old boy who attended the international school where he worked.
He was found guilty in April 2015 and sentenced to 10 years in prison.
In May, Bantleman filed an appeal to the Jakarta High Court, which overturned convictions against him and Indonesian teaching assistant Ferdinant Tjiong.
"Over the last several weeks we've see the house of cards, or the lies, that the prosecutor's case was built on kind of fall apart," said Guy Bantleman.
"I think ultimately, it was really the high court having the autonomy and the time to look through all the reported evidence and really understand what was going and on really see there was nothing here."

Media Video | (not specified) : Canadian freed after sex abuse conviction overturned in Indonesia

Caption: Neil Bantleman cleared by high court in appeal hearing. Indonesia's justice system was subjected to international criticism for how the case was prosecuted

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While Guy Bantleman says he's "elated" to see his brother walk free, he doubts Neil and his wife, Tracy, will ever want to work abroad again.
"I think they'd look long and hard before they considered working in another country."
Guy Bantleman says the whole ordeal especially took a toll on his parents, but he says it also revealed the goodness in people.
"Those sort of people who stepped up and continued to write letters and hold vigils and run campaigns, that's the most heart-warming part out of all of this."

Did Ottawa do enough?

But Guy Bantleman didn't gush about the Canadian government in the same way.
"In a word, their role was frustrating. From our local MP to foreign affairs to minister of state to the PMO, there really wasn't any support at that level."
However University of Calgary law professor Kathleen Mahoney says consular officials can only do so much.
"They can give advice on, you know, lists of lawyers for example that are available. But they can't interfere in any way with the justice system, just as if someone, a foreigner in Canada, was charged with a criminal offence, their consular authorities cannot interfere with the justice system. It has to run its course," she said.
"Consular services are there to help but they're not there to bail you out of jail, they're not there to provide money to you from the government of Canada."
Mahoney says people who want to work overseas have to be aware of local laws and customs and the cultural practices that could get them into trouble.
Guy Bantleman says his brother will likely return to Canada in the fall and spend time in Calgary and then Ontario.
He said he is not sure if the prosecutor will appeal the decision.

Friend ecstatic

In Calgary, Neil Bantleman's friend Joel Chalifoux said he was ecstatic when he heard the news.
"I knew he was innocent. I mean I've known him for so long, he's like a brother to me. There's no way a man of his character and integrity would ever do something like this," he said.
Alie Ronellenfitch, who lived in Jakarta until recently and whose daughter attended the school where Bantleman taught, also said it was clear neither man was guilty.
"It really reminded you, it reminded all of us overseas how tenuous your safety and your security can be," she said.