https://www.thejakartapost.com/academia/2020/09/07/lest-we-forget.html

Lest we forget

- Editorial

The Jakarta Post Jakarta   /   Mon, September 7, 2020   /   08:30 am

Atma Jaya University students erect on Wednesday a banner at their campus
building in Jakarta that reads, “How many more presidents for human rights
abusers to be brought to justice?” on Nov. 21, 2019 to mark 21st year of
the Semanggi I shooting. (JP/Ardila Syakriah)

Before the COVID-19 pandemic struck early in March, for 13 successive
years, without any break, a number of people rallied outside the State
Palace every Thursday to demand justice for their sons, friends and other
victims of human rights violations plaguing the country’s history. The
protest, called Aksi Kamisan, has since shifted online in compliance with
the protocols to prevent COVID-10 transmission.

For so many years, they have tirelessly fought for their cause, despite the
fact that their rallying cry has fallen on deaf ears. However little the
prospects of the movement to bear fruit, it will keep the nation’s memory
of numerous crimes against humanity that the state has been reluctant to
settle, if not recognize.


The uncertainty surrounding the investigation into the arsenic poisoning of
human rights defender Munir Said Thalib 16 years ago today exemplifies the
government’s denial to take responsibility and ensure justice is served. At
least two governments have now failed not only Munir’s family but also the
nation, because impunity has been preserved for perpetrators of human
rights.

Munir died aboard a Garuda flight on Sept. 7, 2004, before he reached the
Netherlands for studies. A number of people have stood trial in connection
with the murder, but nobody has legally been held responsible for the
crime. Garuda pilot Polycarpus Budihari Priyanto was found guilty of
committing the poisoning, but later the Supreme Court only convicted him of
document forgery.

*Read also: **Long road to see justice over Munir’s murder*

In fact, the Munir case is politically complicated for former president
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his successor President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo,
as higherups in the State Intelligence Agency (BIN) were named in the case
— though the allegations were unproven in court. But with the perpetrators
of the murder still around, neither Yudhoyono nor Jokowi has made serious
efforts to unveil the truth.

The state’s failure to settle high profile cases like the Munir killing
comes as no surprise. As Aksi Kamisan has shown, all past gross human
rights violations have not been resolved.

Post-reform Indonesia drew praise for showing commitment to human rights by
enacting the Human Right Law in 1999 and Human Rights Court Law in the
following year. The ad hoc Human Rights Court has heard the 1999 mayhem in
then-East Timor, the 1984 killings in Tanjung Priok in North Jakarta and
the 2001 atrocities in Wasior, West Papua, but the masterminds of the
incidents have remained at large.

Both the government and the House of Representatives have resisted demands
for such a mechanism to solve other serious human rights violations,
apparently because many individuals implicated in the cases are connected
with the ruling elite. An alternative instrument, like a truth and
reconciliation commission, has been considered but there have been no signs
of its realization.

The Indonesian government, like other governments, seems to maintain its
denial of a long list of crimes against humanity — ironically at a time
when it has a seat in the United Nations Human Rights Council for 2020-2022..

When the government does not act what it preaches, a moral force like the
activists of Aksi Kamisan is needed, lest we forget our checkered past.

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