https://www.insideindonesia.org/timotius-and-freeport



https://www.insideindonesia.org/timotius-and-freeport


*Timotius and Freeport*

Written by *JEREMY MULHOLLAND & ABDUL FICKAR HADJAR*

Timotius Kambu / Tempo

In Indonesia’s most protracted labour dispute in modern history, ethnic
Papuan mechanical engineer Timotius Kambu, after suffering an unfair
dismissal by Freeport Indonesia, has fought resolutely to reclaim his
rights and dignity for almost 20 years
<https://kolom.tempo.co/read/1164557/ketidakpatuhan-hukum-freeport-indonesia-dalam-kasus-timotius-kambu>.
In 2001 Freeport fired Timotius on the pretext of a temporary employment
contract even though he was a permanent worker
<http://www.dpr.go.id/dokakd/dokumen/K3_laporan_RDPU_Komisi_III_dengan_Timotius_Kambu,_dll.doc>at
Freeport.

The David and Goliath dispute has passed through industrial relations and
judicial processes, all the way up to the Supreme Court, but also included
mediation by Indonesia’s National Parliament (DPR), Labour Ministry and
Ombudsman. Without a lawyer and facing the legal division of one of the world’s
largest mining companies
<https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/mining-millions-and-corrupt-politicians-in-indonesia-scandal/news-story/022df29edc1a944d826e5a5fa12eecb5>,
Timotius taught himself the intricacies of Indonesian law and achieved
irrefutable legal success. A landmark ruling at Jayapura Industrial
Relations Tribunal on 16 June 2005- which became final and binding on 19
August 2005 and reinforced by Supreme Court decisions 3/2006 and 33/2013-
determined that Freeport Indonesia was guilty of the illegal dismissal of
Timotius Kambu. As a result, by Indonesian law Freeport Indonesia had
reached a legal ‘dead-end’ and since then has been obligated to pay all
unpaid wages to and re-employ Timotius Kambu. Since then, however, Freeport
Indonesia has defied those legal decisions and left a trail of
non-compliance and obfuscation.

Meticulous fact-checking of Freeport Indonesia’s official statements has
revealed that their Vice President of Corporate Communications Riza Pratama
issued a set of misleading and irrelevant claims about the legal history of
this case (*Tempo*, 26 June 2017 and 10 July 2017) (for elaboration see here
<https://suarapapua.com/2018/11/16/begini-pertarungan-panjang-timotius-kambu-melawan-pt-freeport-Indonesia/>).
It is pertinent to ask why Freeport Indonesia chose not to simply pay
Timotius, in alignment with their own Collective Labour Agreement, and
later the various legal decisions, rather than going through years of
litigation? The likely reason is that Freeport Indonesia does not want to
appear susceptible to legal defeat and/or set a precedent. In the words of
distinguished former Indonesian parliamentarian and Papuan community leader
Ruben Gobay, ‘Freeport Indonesia leaders fear the Timotius case will open
the flood gates and inspire other workers involved in labour disputes with
Freeport Indonesia – such as Freeport labour union leader Sudiro – to
follow in the footsteps of Timotius’s heroic struggle.’
*A pattern of resistance*

At the beginning of the Joko Widodo presidency in late 2014 and in 2015,
Freeport’s non-compliance in the Timotius case culminated in Indonesia’s
Ombudsman stepping in to closely monitor the case and the legality of the
new Labour Minister’s actions. Based on a 27 July 2015 directive from
Jayapura’s Industrial Relations Court, the Labour Minister Hanif Dhakiri
and his staff were responsible for calculating the amount Freeport
Indonesia should pay to settle the dispute. In the context of disagreements
between the Ministry and Freeport over the method and scope of the
calculation process, Freeport was forced to recalculate their financial
obligations to Timotius for April 2001 to September 2015. The unintended
consequence of this recalculation was that Freeport had at last officially
acknowledged Timotius Kambu’s status as a permanent worker.

Although Freeport attempted to underestimate the size of their financial
obligations without disclosing their calculation methods, the director
general of labour development and supervision A Mudji Handaya stipulated
that Freeport Indonesia owed Timotius Rp.12 billion (A$1.2 million), an
amount never challenged by Freeport Indonesia in Jakarta’s State
Administrative Court.

In this context, Freeport resisted making payments, attempting to subvert
the implementation of mandated financial obligations. For example, in 2010,
thanks to an informal alliance with Supreme Court Chief Justice Harifin
Tumpa
<https://nasional.tempo.co/read/499550/salah-ketik-denda-supersemar-dinilai-janggal/full&view=ok>
(2009-2012)
whose combined authority over and expertise in civil law was used to
manipulate the cassation process and compensation-based verdicts, Freeport
won a controversial Supreme Court ruling (857, 2010), which nullified the
10 July 2007 Jayapura Industrial Relations Court order (or penetapan).

There are two ways of looking at the legal ramifications of that 2010
Supreme Court ruling. On the one hand, with the 2007 court order out of the
way, Freeport had achieved its strategic objective of terminating the
mandated auction of Freeport assets (seized by the Indonesian government),
which should have yielded funds to pay Timotius’s wages. On the other hand,
the 2013 Supreme Court Legal Opinion clearly stipulated that the 2010
ruling had not superseded or undermined the validity of the 2006 Supreme
Court Reconsideration or the 2005 ruling from Jayapura Industrial Relations
Tribunal.

Ironically, an unintended consequence of the 2010 Supreme Court ruling was
that it enabled a resumption of the calculation process relating to
Freeport’s financial obligations
<https://suarapapua.com/2018/11/16/begini-pertarungan-panjang-timotius-kambu-melawan-pt-freeport-Indonesia/>.
Consequently, Freeport’s obligations – including unpaid wages, pension and
family benefits – have blown out to at least Rp.240 billion and Freeport’s
non-compliance has pushed the labour dispute into the criminal justice
system.
*Criminal charges*

This David and Goliath struggle becomes even more imbalanced in the context
of a 'corrupt politico-business environment
<https://kolom.tempo.co/read/1089172/cerita-rezim-koncoisme-di-indonesia>'.
Prior to 2016, in relation to Freeport Indonesia's non-compliance with the
Jayapura’s Industrial Relations Tribunal verdict or Supreme Court rulings
3/2006 and 33/2013, Freeport Indonesia's leaders apparently experienced
legal and political difficulties – but most of their cases were either
terminated, or remain unresolved.

For example, Clementino Lamury (executive committee member) was the first
decision-maker to be named a suspect in a defamation case reported at the
South Jakarta Police Station. Strangely, he secured an ‘Order for
Termination of Investigation’ signed by Jayapura’s deputy police
commissioner Ridho Purba. Subsequently, Freeport Indonesia's president
director at the time Rozik Boedioro Soetjipto (former Minister of Public
Works) was named a suspect in an industrial-relations based criminal case
at the National Police Headquarters. Without any termination of the
investigation against him, Rozik's status continues to remain unchanged.

*Timotius Kambu's claim reached Indonesia's Supreme Court /
Flickr@usaid/danumurthi mahendra*

In general, legal problems faced by Freeport Indonesia's leadership team
have suspiciously vanished. There was however one well-known scalp in this
labour dispute. Freeport Indonesia's executive vice president Sinta Sirait
was reprimanded officially by the Labour Minister Muhaimin Iskandar and
forced to resign from her position at Freeport Indonesia on 1 March 2013.

In 2016 Timotius Kambu’s case against Freeport Indonesia made headway once
again with the enactment of the Supreme Court’s Regulation on Case-Handling
Procedures of Corporate Crimes (13/2016). The Corporate Crimes Regulation
is intended to not only help facilitate investigations and prosecutions
against corrupt companies
<https://www.liputan6.com/news/read/3684760/kpk-buka-peluang-jerat-lippo-group-finished-suspect-corporation>
but
also bolsters legal certainty for workers who pursue companies engaged in
wage theft and money laundering. As the Timotius case initially occurred
before the establishment of Indonesia’s Corruption Eradication Commission
<https://www.newmandala.org/indonesias-anti-corruption-drive-part-one/> (KPK)
and was not associated with ‘state losses’ and ‘political corruption
<http://www.newmandala.org/indonesias-anti-corruption-drive-part-two/>’,
KPK leaders encouraged Timotius to file corruption allegations against
Freeport Indonesia with the National Police.

On 25 January 2017 Timotius reported Freeport Indonesia's leadership,
including its president director, to the National Police’s Criminal
Investigation Division based in Jakarta. The criminal allegations are as
follows: Freeport Indonesia’s leadership team is accused of committing a
corporate crime in the form of wage misappropriation. The sudden
resignation of Freeport Indonesia president director and former Indonesian
Air Force Chief of Staff Chappy Hakim was probably the culmination of
criminal cases initiated by Timotius Kambu and also parliamentarian Mukhtar
Tompo
<https://video.tempo.co/read/5955/anggota-dpr-mukhtar-tompo-laporkan-chappy-hakim-ke-bareskrim>
..

In September 2017, police summonses of different members of Freeport
Indonesia leadership team piled up. In addition to Chappy Hakim, Clayton
Allen Wenas (alias Tony Wenas), Jonathan Rumainum, Clementino Lamury, Benny
Johannes and Riza Pratama were all eventually investigated and interviewed
by Jakarta’s Police by October-November 2017.

Although the police were ready in late 2017 for a preliminary hearing to
let the case proceed and corruption suspects be named, to this day they
have stopped short of this hearing. For two years there has largely been an
absence of progress even though it is an extremely straightforward case and
substantial legal evidence has been collected. With growing media exposure
and academic scrutiny, Timotius Kambu’s formal complaint to Indonesia’s
Ombudsman on 20 December 2018 resulted in the examination of the police’s
handling of the case for potential maladministration. On 7 February 2019,
the Ombudsman demanded that police immediately conduct a preliminary
hearing – alas by April 2019 police inaction not only persists, but has
deteriorated further with police investigators cutting-off all
communication with Timotius Kambu and also proposing to transfer the case
to Papua even though being acutely aware that the case’s location is
Jakarta.
*Golden eggs and entrenched bias*

The big question is why has a criminal case of this stature focusing on
Freeport Indonesia come to a complete standstill. Research by Indonesia’s
National Police Academy (PTIK) and Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW
<https://www.antikorupsi.org/news/mafia-hukum-di-kepolisian>) found that
corrupt practices are institutionally entrenched, especially at the apex of
Indonesia’s elite politics and big business
<https://nasional.tempo.co/read/1134330/bambang-widjojanto-pertanyakan-nyali-kpk-periksa-tito-karnavian>.
In this labour dispute, potential criminal penalties relating to inaction
on 2006 and 2013 Supreme Court rulings has given rise to opportunities for
senior police to treat the case simply as a ‘goose that lays golden eggs’.
Hidden biases in the law enforcement process behind this criminal case, and
the warping of those processes, largely explain why justice has remained
elusive for Timotius Kambu, as he seeks to claim what he’s owed by Freeport
Indonesia.

This article is a revised version of an opinion piece published in
Indonesian by *Tempo*magazine on 14 January 2019
<https://kolom.tempo.co/read/1164557/ketidakpatuhan-hukum-freeport-indonesia-dalam-kasus-timotius-kambu>
..

*Jeremy Mulholland  ([email protected] <[email protected]>) *is*
executive
director of Investindo International and researcher in international
marketing and Indonesian political economy at La Trobe University,
Melbourne, Australia. *

*Abdul Fickar Hadjar** is criminal law expert from the Faculty of Law,
Trisakti University, Jakarta.*


*Timotius and Freeport* Written by *JEREMY MULHOLLAND & ABDUL FICKAR HADJAR*
 Print
<https://www.insideindonesia.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3505:timotius-and-freeport&catid=210&Itemid=101&tmpl=component&print=1&layout=default&page=>

Timotius Kambu / Tempo


Published:Apr 17, 2019

Tagged under

   -

   Papua <https://www.insideindonesia.org/topics/16-papua/tag>
   -

   Justice System
   <https://www.insideindonesia.org/topics/55-justice-system/tag>
   -

   Mining <https://www.insideindonesia.org/topics/94-mining/tag>
   -

   Labour Rights
   <https://www.insideindonesia.org/topics/112-labour-rights/tag>

*Jeremy Mulholland and Abdul Fickar Hadjar*

In Indonesia’s most protracted labour dispute in modern history, ethnic
Papuan mechanical engineer Timotius Kambu, after suffering an unfair
dismissal by Freeport Indonesia, has fought resolutely to reclaim his
rights and dignity for almost 20 years
<https://kolom.tempo.co/read/1164557/ketidakpatuhan-hukum-freeport-indonesia-dalam-kasus-timotius-kambu>.
In 2001 Freeport fired Timotius on the pretext of a temporary employment
contract even though he was a permanent worker
<http://www.dpr.go.id/dokakd/dokumen/K3_laporan_RDPU_Komisi_III_dengan_Timotius_Kambu,_dll.doc>at
Freeport.

The David and Goliath dispute has passed through industrial relations and
judicial processes, all the way up to the Supreme Court, but also included
mediation by Indonesia’s National Parliament (DPR), Labour Ministry and
Ombudsman. Without a lawyer and facing the legal division of one of the world’s
largest mining companies
<https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/mining-millions-and-corrupt-politicians-in-indonesia-scandal/news-story/022df29edc1a944d826e5a5fa12eecb5>,
Timotius taught himself the intricacies of Indonesian law and achieved
irrefutable legal success. A landmark ruling at Jayapura Industrial
Relations Tribunal on 16 June 2005- which became final and binding on 19
August 2005 and reinforced by Supreme Court decisions 3/2006 and 33/2013-
determined that Freeport Indonesia was guilty of the illegal dismissal of
Timotius Kambu. As a result, by Indonesian law Freeport Indonesia had
reached a legal ‘dead-end’ and since then has been obligated to pay all
unpaid wages to and re-employ Timotius Kambu. Since then, however, Freeport
Indonesia has defied those legal decisions and left a trail of
non-compliance and obfuscation.

Meticulous fact-checking of Freeport Indonesia’s official statements has
revealed that their Vice President of Corporate Communications Riza Pratama
issued a set of misleading and irrelevant claims about the legal history of
this case (*Tempo*, 26 June 2017 and 10 July 2017) (for elaboration see here
<https://suarapapua.com/2018/11/16/begini-pertarungan-panjang-timotius-kambu-melawan-pt-freeport-Indonesia/>).
It is pertinent to ask why Freeport Indonesia chose not to simply pay
Timotius, in alignment with their own Collective Labour Agreement, and
later the various legal decisions, rather than going through years of
litigation? The likely reason is that Freeport Indonesia does not want to
appear susceptible to legal defeat and/or set a precedent. In the words of
distinguished former Indonesian parliamentarian and Papuan community leader
Ruben Gobay, ‘Freeport Indonesia leaders fear the Timotius case will open
the flood gates and inspire other workers involved in labour disputes with
Freeport Indonesia – such as Freeport labour union leader Sudiro – to
follow in the footsteps of Timotius’s heroic struggle.’
*A pattern of resistance*

At the beginning of the Joko Widodo presidency in late 2014 and in 2015,
Freeport’s non-compliance in the Timotius case culminated in Indonesia’s
Ombudsman stepping in to closely monitor the case and the legality of the
new Labour Minister’s actions. Based on a 27 July 2015 directive from
Jayapura’s Industrial Relations Court, the Labour Minister Hanif Dhakiri
and his staff were responsible for calculating the amount Freeport
Indonesia should pay to settle the dispute. In the context of disagreements
between the Ministry and Freeport over the method and scope of the
calculation process, Freeport was forced to recalculate their financial
obligations to Timotius for April 2001 to September 2015. The unintended
consequence of this recalculation was that Freeport had at last officially
acknowledged Timotius Kambu’s status as a permanent worker.

Although Freeport attempted to underestimate the size of their financial
obligations without disclosing their calculation methods, the director
general of labour development and supervision A Mudji Handaya stipulated
that Freeport Indonesia owed Timotius Rp.12 billion (A$1.2 million), an
amount never challenged by Freeport Indonesia in Jakarta’s State
Administrative Court.

In this context, Freeport resisted making payments, attempting to subvert
the implementation of mandated financial obligations. For example, in 2010,
thanks to an informal alliance with Supreme Court Chief Justice Harifin
Tumpa
<https://nasional.tempo.co/read/499550/salah-ketik-denda-supersemar-dinilai-janggal/full&view=ok>
(2009-2012)
whose combined authority over and expertise in civil law was used to
manipulate the cassation process and compensation-based verdicts, Freeport
won a controversial Supreme Court ruling (857, 2010), which nullified the
10 July 2007 Jayapura Industrial Relations Court order (or penetapan).

There are two ways of looking at the legal ramifications of that 2010
Supreme Court ruling. On the one hand, with the 2007 court order out of the
way, Freeport had achieved its strategic objective of terminating the
mandated auction of Freeport assets (seized by the Indonesian government),
which should have yielded funds to pay Timotius’s wages. On the other hand,
the 2013 Supreme Court Legal Opinion clearly stipulated that the 2010
ruling had not superseded or undermined the validity of the 2006 Supreme
Court Reconsideration or the 2005 ruling from Jayapura Industrial Relations
Tribunal.

Ironically, an unintended consequence of the 2010 Supreme Court ruling was
that it enabled a resumption of the calculation process relating to
Freeport’s financial obligations
<https://suarapapua.com/2018/11/16/begini-pertarungan-panjang-timotius-kambu-melawan-pt-freeport-Indonesia/>.
Consequently, Freeport’s obligations – including unpaid wages, pension and
family benefits – have blown out to at least Rp.240 billion and Freeport’s
non-compliance has pushed the labour dispute into the criminal justice
system.
*Criminal charges*

This David and Goliath struggle becomes even more imbalanced in the context
of a 'corrupt politico-business environment
<https://kolom.tempo.co/read/1089172/cerita-rezim-koncoisme-di-indonesia>'.
Prior to 2016, in relation to Freeport Indonesia's non-compliance with the
Jayapura’s Industrial Relations Tribunal verdict or Supreme Court rulings
3/2006 and 33/2013, Freeport Indonesia's leaders apparently experienced
legal and political difficulties – but most of their cases were either
terminated, or remain unresolved.

For example, Clementino Lamury (executive committee member) was the first
decision-maker to be named a suspect in a defamation case reported at the
South Jakarta Police Station. Strangely, he secured an ‘Order for
Termination of Investigation’ signed by Jayapura’s deputy police
commissioner Ridho Purba. Subsequently, Freeport Indonesia's president
director at the time Rozik Boedioro Soetjipto (former Minister of Public
Works) was named a suspect in an industrial-relations based criminal case
at the National Police Headquarters. Without any termination of the
investigation against him, Rozik's status continues to remain unchanged.

*Timotius Kambu's claim reached Indonesia's Supreme Court /
Flickr@usaid/danumurthi mahendra*

In general, legal problems faced by Freeport Indonesia's leadership team
have suspiciously vanished. There was however one well-known scalp in this
labour dispute. Freeport Indonesia's executive vice president Sinta Sirait
was reprimanded officially by the Labour Minister Muhaimin Iskandar and
forced to resign from her position at Freeport Indonesia on 1 March 2013.

In 2016 Timotius Kambu’s case against Freeport Indonesia made headway once
again with the enactment of the Supreme Court’s Regulation on Case-Handling
Procedures of Corporate Crimes (13/2016). The Corporate Crimes Regulation
is intended to not only help facilitate investigations and prosecutions
against corrupt companies
<https://www.liputan6.com/news/read/3684760/kpk-buka-peluang-jerat-lippo-group-finished-suspect-corporation>
but
also bolsters legal certainty for workers who pursue companies engaged in
wage theft and money laundering. As the Timotius case initially occurred
before the establishment of Indonesia’s Corruption Eradication Commission
<https://www.newmandala.org/indonesias-anti-corruption-drive-part-one/> (KPK)
and was not associated with ‘state losses’ and ‘political corruption
<http://www.newmandala.org/indonesias-anti-corruption-drive-part-two/>’,
KPK leaders encouraged Timotius to file corruption allegations against
Freeport Indonesia with the National Police.

On 25 January 2017 Timotius reported Freeport Indonesia's leadership,
including its president director, to the National Police’s Criminal
Investigation Division based in Jakarta. The criminal allegations are as
follows: Freeport Indonesia’s leadership team is accused of committing a
corporate crime in the form of wage misappropriation. The sudden
resignation of Freeport Indonesia president director and former Indonesian
Air Force Chief of Staff Chappy Hakim was probably the culmination of
criminal cases initiated by Timotius Kambu and also parliamentarian Mukhtar
Tompo
<https://video.tempo.co/read/5955/anggota-dpr-mukhtar-tompo-laporkan-chappy-hakim-ke-bareskrim>
..

In September 2017, police summonses of different members of Freeport
Indonesia leadership team piled up. In addition to Chappy Hakim, Clayton
Allen Wenas (alias Tony Wenas), Jonathan Rumainum, Clementino Lamury, Benny
Johannes and Riza Pratama were all eventually investigated and interviewed
by Jakarta’s Police by October-November 2017.

Although the police were ready in late 2017 for a preliminary hearing to
let the case proceed and corruption suspects be named, to this day they
have stopped short of this hearing. For two years there has largely been an
absence of progress even though it is an extremely straightforward case and
substantial legal evidence has been collected. With growing media exposure
and academic scrutiny, Timotius Kambu’s formal complaint to Indonesia’s
Ombudsman on 20 December 2018 resulted in the examination of the police’s
handling of the case for potential maladministration. On 7 February 2019,
the Ombudsman demanded that police immediately conduct a preliminary
hearing – alas by April 2019 police inaction not only persists, but has
deteriorated further with police investigators cutting-off all
communication with Timotius Kambu and also proposing to transfer the case
to Papua even though being acutely aware that the case’s location is
Jakarta.
*Golden eggs and entrenched bias*

The big question is why has a criminal case of this stature focusing on
Freeport Indonesia come to a complete standstill. Research by Indonesia’s
National Police Academy (PTIK) and Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW
<https://www.antikorupsi.org/news/mafia-hukum-di-kepolisian>) found that
corrupt practices are institutionally entrenched, especially at the apex of
Indonesia’s elite politics and big business
<https://nasional.tempo.co/read/1134330/bambang-widjojanto-pertanyakan-nyali-kpk-periksa-tito-karnavian>.
In this labour dispute, potential criminal penalties relating to inaction
on 2006 and 2013 Supreme Court rulings has given rise to opportunities for
senior police to treat the case simply as a ‘goose that lays golden eggs’.
Hidden biases in the law enforcement process behind this criminal case, and
the warping of those processes, largely explain why justice has remained
elusive for Timotius Kambu, as he seeks to claim what he’s owed by Freeport
Indonesia.

This article is a revised version of an opinion piece published in
Indonesian by *Tempo*magazine on 14 January 2019
<https://kolom.tempo.co/read/1164557/ketidakpatuhan-hukum-freeport-indonesia-dalam-kasus-timotius-kambu>
..

*Jeremy Mulholland  ([email protected] <[email protected]>) *is*
executive
director of Investindo International and researcher in international
marketing and Indonesian political economy at La Trobe University,
Melbourne, Australia. *

*Abdul Fic*

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