HRW Indonesia: New Prisoners of Conscience in the Post-Suharto Era
BBSNews - 2003-07-10 -- HRW: Jakarta, July 10, 2003 - In separate reports released today, Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch called for the release of all
prisoners of conscience in Indonesia and for the repeal of legislation
used to prosecute and imprison activists engaged in peaceful political
expression.
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| Flags, from left, of Australia, Indonesia, and the United States hang at the explosion site in Kuta, Bali, Indonesia, Thursday, Oct. 17, 2002. More than 180 people, most of them foreign tourists, were killed and hundreds injured when what is suspected to be a car bomb exploded at the nightclub packed with foreign tourists and locals here. AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye. |
A series of amnesties following the forced resignation of President
Suharto in May 1998 led to the release of all prisoners of conscience
and pledges by the Indonesian authorities to end politically motivated
prosecutions. However, since then at least 46 prisoners of conscience
have been imprisoned--39 of them since Megawati Sukarnoputri became
president in July 2001.
"Moves towards greater political freedoms and respect for freedom of
expression are being undermined by the prosecution and imprisonment of
peaceful political, labor, independence and other activists," said
Brad Adams, Human Rights Watch's Asia division director. "With less
than one year to go before Indonesia's first direct presidential
elections, to be locking up individuals who criticize the government
is an alarming development for the electoral process."
The two human rights organizations expressed particular concern about
the increasing use of an article under Indonesia's Criminal Code that
punishes "insulting the President or Vice-President" with up to six
years imprisonment. Since late 2002, at least 14 political activists
have been sentenced to prison terms and three others are facing
charges under these provisions. In most cases, the activists have been
arrested following their participation in peaceful demonstrations.
"Repressive legislation used under the authoritarian regime of former
President Suharto has no place in a country which claims to be set on
a path towards a fully-fledged democracy," said Ingrid Massage,
interim director of the Asia and Pacific Program of Amnesty
International.
Ignatius Mahendra, the Chairman of the Yogyakarta branch of the
National Democratic Student's League (LMND), and Yoyok Eko
Widodo, a member of the Street Buskers Union (SPI), are among the
latest to be imprisoned under charges of insulting the President
or Vice-President. Each was sentenced to three years in prison in
April after being found guilty of burning portraits of President
Megawati Sukarnoputri and Vice-President Hamzah Haz during a
peaceful demonstration in January this year. On July 1, a five-
year prison term was handed down to Muhammad Nazar, a leading
political activist in Aceh province on Sumatra. He was accused of
"spreading hatred against the government" for his participation
in peaceful pro-independence meetings earlier this year.
A range of other repressive legislation has also been used to
detain prisoners of conscience. Peaceful independence activists
in the provinces of Aceh and Papua have been charged with
"spreading hatred against the government" or with rebellion. Four
trade union activists who were arrested in East Kalimantan in
January 2002 for their role in peaceful protests against wage
levels are currently appealing prison sentences of up to six
months after being found guilty of inciting the public to commit
a criminal act.
Both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have campaigned
for many years for the amendment of the Indonesian Criminal Code
to conform with international law in order to protect basic
freedoms of expression and assembly.
"The repeal of these laws is long overdue," said Ingrid Massage
of Amnesty International. "Any legal provisions that criminalize
peaceful political activities must be repealed as soon as
possible. In the meantime, the Megawati administration should
make a public commitment to end any such prosecutions, which call
into question its commitment to a pluralistic society based on
respect for human rights."
The two human rights organizations also called upon donors,
including Japan, the European Union, the United States and
Australia, to insist on legal reforms to end these retrograde
practices that are creating a new generation of political
prisoners in Indonesia.
The problem of unfair trials in which prisoners of conscience
have been convicted must also be addressed. In many cases,
arrests have been carried out without warrants and detainees have
been denied access to lawyers, and in some cases, subjected to
torture and other ill-treatment.
For a full text of Amnesty International's report, Indonesia: Old
laws - new prisoners of conscience (ASA 21/027/2003, 10 July
2003), please see http.www.amnesty.org.
The Human Rights Watch's report Indonesia: A Return to the New Order?
Political Prisoners in Megawati's Indonesia can be found at:
http://hrw.org/reports/2003/indon0703/
To read more on human rights issues in Indonesia, please see:
http://www.hrw.org/asia/indonesia.php
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The preceding report was provided to BBSNews by the Human Rights Watch International (HRW).
Michael Hess is the Editor of BBSNews in Charlotte, NC. Write to the editor here. Not all submissions are published. Or visit the completely new BBSNews Blog and Forum on our front page - Please Participate in BBSNews!
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