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No Justice? Indonesia Struggles to Address History of Human Rights Abuse
December 02, 2012

 Parents of the disappeared Paian Siahaan (right) and Damaris Hutabarat(left) 
hold a picture of their son Ucok. (IRIN Photo/Mark Wilson) 

Victims of alleged human rights violations in Indonesia, a country where human 
rights courts set up in 2000 have yet to convict a single case, are facing an 
uphill battle to bring perpetrators to justice.

Data from local NGO Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence 
(Kontras) estimates more than one million people suffered rights abuses between 
1965 and 1998 that took place largely under President Suharto’s military rule, 
which ended in 1998 with his forced resignation.

“We have an unusual situation in this country. You have all these human rights 
violations but as things stand, no-one has been found guilty in a human rights 
court,” said Haris Azhar, co-ordinator of Kontras.

In 2000 the Indonesian parliament created human rights courts to hear and rule 
on cases concerning gross violations of human rights. Over 12 years, 12 cases 
have come before the country’s four human rights courts, with no resulting 
convictions.

Enforced disappearances

In the tumultuous run-up to the country’s first steps towards democracy in 
1998, university students challenging the military regime began disappearing.

Mugiyanto, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name, was detained in 
1998.

“I was blindfolded and then held, tortured and interrogated for about four days 
by the military’s special forces. Then they handed me to the police, and they 
put me in a local prison for three months. I was then released when the 
leadership changed,” said Mugiyanto, who chairs the Indonesian Association of 
Families of the Disappeared (IKOHI).

In May 1998 President Suharto stepped down and was replaced by then 
Vice-President Bacharuddin Jusuf Habibie.

Mugiyanto said a total of 23 students disappeared, with nine (including him) 
later released. Thirteen remain missing, including Ucok Siahaan, who was a 
22-year-old university student whose family still awaits news.

“He visited us several times [in 1998] and each time, he told us to stock up on 
food and supplies because the political situation in Jakarta was out of 
control,” said his father, 65-year-old Paian Siahaan. “In May he telephoned us 
and said not to go out of the house. He said if anything bad happened, just go 
to the mosque.”

His family has not heard from him since.

“We are angry with the government,” said Paian. “They always said they would 
help us establish what happened, but nothing has been resolved.

“We don’t want to sue anyone in a court of law,” said Paian. “We just want to 
know what happened to our son. If he is gone, we want to find his remains and 
lay them to rest in the family graveyard. We’re old now and we just want to 
live in peace, but until we know what happened to our son, we can’t do that.”

State brutality in Papua

In recent years activists have reported human rights abuses in the country’s 
remote Papuan region, where a separatist conflict has simmered for decades.

The resource-rich region (3,000 kilometers east of Jakarta and including the 
provinces of Papua and West Papua) has the lowest level of human development of 
Indonesia’s 33 provinces.

Penihas Lokbere from Jayapura, the capital of Papua Province, said he is one of 
105 people arrested by the police in 2000 in the university town of Abepura, 
about 10 kilometers from Jayapura.

According to Human Rights Watch, a group of unidentified people attacked a 
police post in Abepura, killing two policemen and a security guard.

“The police wanted to retaliate,” said Lokbere. “They came to our dormitory 
while we were sleeping and arrested us. They didn’t ask any questions.”

Along with his fellow students, Lokbere was imprisoned for three days, where he 
said he was tortured, handcuffed and beaten with a metal crook. Until now, no 
one has been convicted.

A 2012 joint report of the International Centre for Transitional Justice (ITCJ) 
and the Jayapura-based Institute of Human Rights Studies and Advocacy (Elsham), 
recorded nearly 750 rights violations against Papuans from 1960-2012, including 
arbitrary arrest and detention, torture and killings.

Paul Mambrasar, a representative of Elsham said the actual number of violations 
may be much higher. 
“Many of the victims are not ready to speak about what happened,” he said. “The 
provinces of Papua are militarized and people are worried if they give 
information, they will be terrorized by the military or the police.”

The Papua region has had decades-long separatist tension related to the stalled 
implementation of a special autonomy arrangement that was granted in 2001; 
communities’ lack access to natural resource wealth such as gold, copper and 
timber; and there have been security crackdowns on political demonstrations.

Josef Roy Benedict, Amnesty International’s Indonesia campaigner based in 
London, said ongoing human rights violations in the region are in part due to a 
culture of impunity there.

“Police officers tend to be punished only for disciplinary offences, often in 
closed-door proceedings, while offences by the military are dealt with through 
the military court system, which lacks independence and impartiality,” said 
Benedict.

Persecution of Ahmadis

Data from the Jakarta-based NGO Setara Institute calculated nearly 130 
violations of religious freedom nationwide from January to June 2012. Most 
happened in West Java against minority religious groups such as the Ahmadiyah, 
an Islamic sect that shares many Sunni beliefs with some 500,000 adherents 
nationwide.

In February 2011 a 22-year-old Ahmadi, Ahmad Masihuddin, was visiting a village 
outside Jakarta when an Islamic fundamentalist group, which does not recognize 
Ahmadis as Muslim, attacked Ahmadiyah followers in the village.

“The mob was at least 1,000-strong. We [Ahmadis in the village] were 
outnumbered, so we ran, but I was captured,” said Masihuddin. “They dragged me 
through a rice field, struck me in the waist with a machete and hit me with 
bamboo. They said they wanted to cut off my genitals.”

It was only when Masihuddin called out to his assailants that he was a Muslim 
that the attack stopped. 

“They thought I was one of them, a Sunni,” he said. 

Sunni Islam is the largest branch of Islam in Indonesia.

Three of Masihuddin’s friends were killed in the attack. Perpetrators were 
sentenced to 3-6 months in prison, which Masihuddin said was not commensurate 
with the crime.

Harkristuti Harkrisnowo, director-general for human rights at the Ministry of 
Law and Human Rights, acknowledged the sentences were too lenient and suggested 
that law enforcers need to do more to protect minorities.

“On the ground there are now fundamentalist groups that blatantly threaten 
minorities,” she said. “The police have difficulties containing these groups, 
but they must try to deal with this violence.”

In 2008 the government issued a joint ministerial decree banning Ahmadis from 
disseminating their beliefs on the basis the reformist movement “deviated” from 
mainstream Islam in its teachings.

Hard-line groups have used the decree to justify attacks against Ahmadis, but 
Harkrisnowo said the decree was issued to protect Ahmadis.

“They aren’t allowed to publicly assemble for their own protection because if 
they do, they may incite violence against them,” she said.

But even without assembling for worship, they are still attacked, said Malik 
Saifurrahman, an Ahmadi from the island of Lombok. Since 2002, his family house 
has been destroyed on four separate occasions — before it was completely burnt 
down in 2006.

“There were many attacks on houses, and about 300 Ahmadis were forced to move,” 
said Saifurrahman, who added he did not know the identity of the attackers.

“I have now moved to Jakarta for study, but my family lives in a government 
refuge in Mataram [created] for Ahmadis who have had their homes burned down,” 
he said. “At first the government provided us with food and water, but now that 
has stopped.”

Harkrisnowo said she did not know whether the authorities will re-house 
displaced Ahmadis.

The US Commission on International Religious Freedom’s 2012 report recorded 
that at least 50 Ahmadiyah places of worship have been vandalized and 36 
forcibly closed since 2008, even though the Indonesian constitution guarantees 
freedom of religious expression.

But guaranteeing this constitutional freedom has been difficult for the state, 
said Harkrisnowo. “The central government needs to be more firm on this issue.”

Legal wrangling

The National Commission on Human Rights — known locally as Komnas HAM — is an 
independent, government-appointed commission to monitor violations, advocate on 
behalf of victims and launch abuse inquiries. The attorney-general’s office 
then investigates the allegations, except for those that took place before 
2000, which are handled by an ad-hoc human rights court set up by presidential 
decree.

Kontras’s Azhar said Komnas HAM has recommended seven cases for government 
investigation through ad-hoc courts — all were rejected.

Harkrisnowo said lack of prosecutions for human rights abuses thus far is not 
due to lack of political will, but rather too-scant evidence.

“In each case, officials have looked at whether there is sufficient evidence, 
or whether there have been any errors made in terms of legal procedure, and 
each time have decided that no one can be found guilty,” she told IRIN.

Efforts to create other legal mechanisms to prosecute human rights abuses have 
stalled.

Next steps

The country’s Constitutional Court declared a 2006 law on Truth and 
Reconciliation unconstitutional because of a provision that made victim 
reparations conditional on amnesties being issued to perpetrators. The 
government is attempting to pass a new law.

Indonesia is a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political 
Rights (ICCPR) and has ratified the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, 
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.

But it has yet to sign or ratify the Rome Statute, the treaty that created the 
International Criminal Court in 2002.

Harkrisnowo said the government is preparing to ratify both the Rome Statute 
and the International Convention on Enforced Disappearances.

IRIN

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