http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA21/023/2012/en/3ade7b8d-a033-4f6f-9ac2-c17f983296eb/asa210232012en.html

Document - Indonesia: Release Johan Teterissa and other prisoners of conscience 
in Indonesia
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL 

PUBLIC STATEMENT 

Index: ASA 21/023/2012 

29 June 2012 

Indonesia: Release Johan Teterissa and other prisoners of conscience in 
Indonesia 

Five years since Johan Teterissa was arrested for his part in a peaceful 
demonstration, Amnesty International reiterates longstanding calls to the 
Indonesian authorities to immediately and unconditionally release him and all 
other prisoners of conscience in Indonesia. 

Johan Teterissa was arrested on 29 June 2007 after he and 22 other activists 
took part in a peaceful demonstration in front of President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono, who was attending a government organized ceremony in the city of 
Ambon, the capital of Maluku province. During the ceremony, Johan Teterissa led 
other activists – most of whom were teachers or farmers – onto the field and 
performed a traditional war dance in front of the President. At the end of the 
dance the activists unfurled the “Benang Raja” – a banned regional flag. 

The police and presidential guards responded by escorting Johan Teterissa and 
21 of the activists from the field, punching them and beating them with rifle 
butts once they were out of sight of the President. The 22 activists were then 
tortured by police – including officers from the anti-terrorist unit 
Detachment-88 (Densus-88) – during their detention and interrogation. They were 
beaten, forced to crawl on their stomachs over hot asphalt, whipped with 
electric cables and had billiard balls forced into their mouths. Five years on, 
no independent investigation has been carried out into the allegations of 
torture and none of the police officers was ever held to account. 

Amnesty International calls on the Indonesian authorities to conduct an 
effective and independent investigation into the allegations of human rights 
violations, including torture, by the security forces against Johan Teterissa 
and the other activists, and to bring those responsible to justice in fair 
trials.

Amnesty International is concerned that Johan Teterissa does not have adequate 
access to clean drinking water at Madiun prison in East Java, where he is being 
held. Furthermore, there are credible reports that the prison authorities are 
limiting the amount of water available to him and other prisoners for bathing. 
The authorities must ensure that prison conditions meet standards provided for 
in Indonesian law and the UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of 
Prisoners. 

Johan Teterissa and the other activists were eventually charged with 
“rebellion” (makar) under Articles 106 and 110 of the Indonesian Criminal Code 
– laws which are often used by the Indonesian authorities to imprison peaceful 
political activists. Johan Teterissa was initially sentenced to life 
imprisonment; however, this was reduced on appeal to 15 years. The 21 other 
activists were sentenced to between seven and 20 years’ imprisonment. A 
twenty-third activist was arrested in June 2008 and was sentenced to four 
years’ imprisonment in March 2009. 

Amnesty International calls on the Indonesian authorities to repeal or else 
amend Articles 106 and 110 of the Criminal Code so that these articles are no 
longer used to criminalize freedom of expression.

In November 2008 the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) declared 
Johan Teterissa’s detention to be arbitrary on the grounds that he was 
imprisoned for the exercise of his rights to freedom of expression and peaceful 
assembly – Opinion No. 41/2008 (Indonesia). These rights are guaranteed in the 
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which 
Indonesia is a state party, and in the Indonesian Constitution. The WGAD also 
found Johan Teterissa’s detention to be arbitrary because he had been subjected 
to an unfair trial. Article 14 of the ICCPR guarantees the right to a fair and 
public hearing by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal established 
by law. 

Amnesty International takes no position whatsoever on the political status of 
any province of Indonesia, including calls for independence. However the 
organization believes that the right to freedom of expression includes the 
right to peacefully advocate referendums, independence or any other political 
solutions that do not involve incitement to discrimination, hostility or 
violence. 

The ICCPR and the Indonesian Constitution guarantee the rights to freedom of 
expression, opinion, association and peaceful assembly. While the Indonesian 
government has the duty and the right to maintain public order, it must ensure 
that any restrictions to freedoms of expression and peaceful assembly are no 
more than is permitted under international human rights law.


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