https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/10/05/omnibus-bill-on-job-creation-passed-into-law-despite-opposition.html

Omnibus bill on job creation passed into law despite opposition

Ghina Ghaliya The Jakarta Post Jakarta   /   Mon, October 5, 2020   /
07:10 pm


Some lawmakers of the House of Representatives attend the plenary meeting
on the endorsement for 2019 state budget implementation bill (P2APBN) in
the House's complex in Senayan, Central Jakarta while others joined the
meeting virtually on Sept. 15. (Antara/Puspa Perwitasari)

The government and the House of Representatives passed on Monday the
controversial omnibus bill on job creation into law, sooner than its
initial plan of Thursday, despite mounting opposition to the bill over its
feared impact on the environment and labor rights.

The final draft of the bill, a copy of which was obtained by The Jakarta
Post, is 905 pages long and contains 185 articles in 15 chapters. The law
aims to improve bureaucratic efficiency and cut red tape, particularly in
regard to business permits and investment.

In a plenary session on Monday, led by Deputy House Speaker Azis Syamsuddin
of the Golkar Party, House Legislation Body (Baleg) chairman Supratman Andi
Agtas said that the deliberation of the bill had taken place from April 20
to Oct. 3, adding that lawmakers and the government had been holding
meetings, even on weekends, to expedite the deliberation.

"The deliberation was careful enough until the end. All factions paid
attention to workers' rights in the decision-making process,” the Gerindra
Party politician said.

A number of President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo’s Cabinet members were present
during the plenary, including Coordinating Economic Minister Airlangga
Hartarto, Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati, Manpower Minister Ida
Fauziyah, Law and Human Rights Minister Yasonna Laoly and Home Minister
Tito Karnavian.

Airlangga said the law was necessary as the country needed to increase
employment and improve the business climate following the pandemic.

"We are now working to handle COVID-19, which has had a significant impact
on the global and national economy. There were 43,600 regulations that
needed to be sorted out before the pandemic and our competitiveness is also
lagging behind in ASEAN," Airlangga, who is also the Golkar Party chairman,
said.

The law is also seen as necessary by the government since the country’s
economy shrank by 5.32 percent in the second quarter this year, and is
widely expected to record the first economic contraction since the 1998
Asian financial crisis this year.

*Read also:* *Police telegram urges control over protests against
controversial jobs bill*

Seven House factions have conveyed their approval of the bill, which is one
of Airlangga’s flagship programs, namely the Indonesian Democratic Party of
Struggle (PDI-P), Golkar, Gerindra, the NasDem Party, the National
Awakening Party (PKB), the National Mandate Party (PAN) and the United
Development Party (PPP).

Two other factions – the Democratic Party and the Prosperous Justice Party
(PKS) – have rejected to the bill, with the former walking out of the
plenary meeting.

"Delay the bill. Look at the public opposition everywhere. The workers are
suffering a lot from the COVID-19 crisis,” Didik Mukrianto of the
Democratic Party said.


Ahead of Monday’s plenary, social media users expressed their frustrations
over the bill by writing posts with the hashtags #DPRRIKhianatiRakyat
(#HouseBetraysThePeople), #BatalkanOmnibusLaw (#CancelTheOmnibusLaw) and
#MosiTidakPercaya (#VoteOfNoConfidence).

Civil society organizations, grouped in a coalition calling itself the
Indonesian People's Faction (FRI), have also voiced their disappointment,
saying the state has turned a blind eye to popular opposition to the
controversial bill, which the FRI believes only accommodates business
interests.


Among the coalition members are several labor groups, student organizations
and NGOs, including the Indonesian Legal Aid Institute (YLBHI), the Mining
and Advocacy Network (JATAM), the Indonesian Forum for the Environment
(Walhi), the Indonesian People’s Coalition for Fisheries Justice (KIARA)
and the Indigenous People's Alliance of the Archipelago (AMAN).


“We’ve [issued] a vote of no confidence. The people demand an end to the
deliberation and a cancellation of the job creation bill. The government
and House have betrayed the people and the 1945 Constitution," the
coalition said in a written statement on Monday.

Labor groups on the same day held protests against the bill in several
locations as the police prevented them holding a mass rally in front of the
House compound in Senayan, Central Jakarta.

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