Releasing Ba’asyir, opening Pandora’s Box


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Releasing Ba’asyir, opening Pandora’s Box

The Jakarta Post

The government has the power to release convicts, including firebrand Muslim 
cleric Abu Bakar Ba’asyir, who was ...
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   - Leopold Sudaryono


Jakarta   /   Wed, January 23, 2019   /   04:09 pmStaying firm: Terrorist 
convict Abu Bakar Baasyir (second right) signs his investigation dossier during 
his case review hearing at the Cilacap District Court in Central Java on Feb.9, 
2016. (ANTARA FOTO/Idhad Zakaria)


The government has the power to release convicts, including firebrand Muslim 
cleric Abu Bakar Ba’asyir, who was found guilty of committing acts of 
terrorism. 

Ba’asyir is currently serving a 15-year sentence that is to end in 2025. By law 
he can apply for parole after serving two-thirds of his sentence, which he 
reached on Dec. 13, 2018. 

However, there is a number of requirements Ba’asyir had to meet and he 
apparently rejected them. He had to be willing to cooperate with law 
enforcement to bring similar crimes to justice, he had to show remorse for the 
crimes he committed and he had to pledge allegiance to the Unitary State of the 
Republic of Indonesia. 

Other than getting out on parole, Ba’asyir could also be released if President 
Joko “Jokowi” Widodo grants him clemency. 

This option, however, may not be on the table because it requires the 
submission of an application by a convict who admits to having committed a 
crime and seeks mercy from the President. In various statements made to the 
media, Ba’asyir has been adamant that his actions were not crimes and that he 
would not ask for forgiveness.

At this point Yusril Ihza Mahendra, the President’s legal counselor, negotiated 
to release Ba’asyir without making him meet those requirements. Yusril insisted 
the requirements were not necessary since Ba’asyir was found guilty prior to 
the 2012 government regulation stipulating the three conditions coming into 
force. 

Yusril said he believed the requirements violated the non-retroactive 
principle, therefore a previous regulation signed in 2006 — which did not 
require a loyalty statement — should prevail. There are at least two flaws in 
Yusril’s — hence the government’s — argument. 

First, there is no violation of the non-retroactive principle. Although 
Ba’asyir was convicted in 2011, he applied for parole several years after the 
implementation of the 2012 regulation. 

Regardless of when a person is convicted by a court, the mechanism for granting 
remission, leave, or parole should be in accordance with the rules that are in 
effect at the time of the filing of the application. 

Second, the main function of imprisonment is incapacitation and rehabilitation. 
By being in custody, Ba’asyir’s ability to coordinate a terrorist network is 
reduced. His crime is non-physical, based on ideology. Prison provides a secure 
environment to contain any attempts to further instigate violence against the 
state and members of the public. 

On rehabilitation, it is expected that while in prison terrorism convicts can 
take part in deradicalization programs. Neither of these two main functions of 
Ba’asyir’s sentence would be served if he is released without meeting the three 
conditions. 

Third, the court handed down a harsher sentence to Ba’asyir after the last 
guilty verdict for two reasons: He committed a similar crime in the past and 
committed an extraordinary crime, i.e. terrorism. That is why the 2012 
regulation stipulates more stringent conditions in his case, the very purpose 
that Yusril would try to get the President overrule it. 

There are a number of options the government may consider, however. 

First, imprisonment should only take freedom of movement away from convicts, 
but overcrowding has deprived convicts of dignity and humanity. The situation 
affects the elderly with health problems like Ba’asyir. The government needs to 
set a minimum standard to serve the basic needs of elderly prisoners or inmates 
with health problems. 

Second, gradual assimilation may be a better option. The Law and Human Rights 
Ministry can relocate Ba’asyir to another prison where he can serve the rest of 
his sentence. The place could be an official house adjacent to the prison, 
where Ba’asyir can live with his immediate family and receive better health 
care. 

Communication and visits would still be regulated and supervised. This gradual 
treatment would serve all purposes: humanitarian, rehabilitation and 
incapacitation of possible re-offending. 

Third, the President could grant amnesty to Ba’asyir. This option requires 
Ba’asyir to neither acknowledge the government nor declare his loyalty to the 
state. However, this needs to be discussed with the House of Representatives, 
although the final decision lies with the President. This option comes with a 
risk because Ba’asyir may relapse into his network activity after his release.

Granting Ba’asyir parole by overriding the requirements stipulated by the law 
would be a direct intervention by the President in the legal process. 

It would all but violate the government’s own commitment to the rule of law and 
tarnish the image of the government as it is completing its mandate, which ends 
in October. 

The government should consider other options that would not adversely affect 
the rule of law, like gradual assimilation or amnesty.

***

The writer is completing his PhD in criminology at the Australian National 
University.

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and 
do not reflect the official stance of The Jakarta Post.

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