Urge the Appeal of Conscience Foundation to withdraw its award to President 
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. He is no statesman.

Sign the petition today: http://s.shr.lc/19349F6

Thank you to all who have signed so far. Please spread the word, and please 
donate to support ETAN. http://www.etan.org/etan/donate.htm 

Thank you. 


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We, the undersigned urge the Appeal of Conscience Foundation to withdraw its 
World Statesman Award to Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. This 
award shocks our conscience. 

On May 6 in Jakarta, a coalition of victims of religious discrimination and 
human rights groups in Indonesia urged the foundation to drop its plan to give 
the award. We support this call.

The foundation says that it works "on behalf of religious freedom and human 
rights throughout the world" and "promotes peace, tolerance and ethnic conflict 
resolution."

It is regrettable that the foundation is so ready to bestow such an award 
without first seriously examining the situation in the country to see if the 
recipient truly merits the award. 

In Indonesia there is continuing religious violence, governmental inaction, and 
official impunity. Giving President Yudhoyono the World Statesman Award 
dishonors to both the foundation and mocks its recipient.

Under President Yudhoyono's leadership, religious intolerance in Indonesia has 
escalated. Houses of worship have been attacked and the followers of religious 
minority faiths have faced discrimination, assault and worse. Police and public 
officials often refuse to stand up to the intolerant bullies. Sometimes they 
take the side of the attackers, using their office to spread bigotry and 
enforce discrimination. 

President Yudhoyono has established an unprecedented discriminatory legal 
infrastructure in Indonesia. He has issued a discriminatory regulations, 
defended the blasphemy law at the Constitutional Court, and promulgated a 
decree threatening to five years in jail for anyone who "propagates" the 
Ahmadiyah teaching. 

In recent years conflict and repression have escalated in West Papua, where its 
indigenous people face discrimination in their own land. At the end of April, 
there were at least 40 Papuan political prisoners.

Under President Yudhoyono leadership, impunity continues for past crimes 
against humanity and war crimes. Police and military often act with limited 
accountability throughout the archipelago. 

Sign the petition today: http://s.shr.lc/19349F6


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Donate to support ETAN. Thank you.  http://www.etan.org/etan/donate.htm 

Background

Please e-mail us to be notified of details of any protest at the award ceremony 
in NYC  should the award go forward.

The Appeal of Conscience Foundation plans to give the award to President 
Yudhoyono on May 30 in New York City. 

When President Yudhoyono first took office, he promised that his administration 
would promote human rights and tolerance. Nine years later, the prospects for 
accountability for past rights violations have receded; religious intolerance 
has grown. Indonesia's security forces have become increasingly abusive in West 
Papua. Police and soldiers who violate human rights are rarely held 
accountable. Serious human rights violations by members of the military are 
tried in military courts where soldiers, if convicted, receive light sentences. 

Recent examples of religious persecution include the March 21 demolition of the 
HKBP Taman Sari church in Bekasi after an order from the regional government. 
Four Ahmadiyah places of worship were closed within a month in West Java. Last 
August, members of the Shia community in Sampang, East Java, were forced from 
their homes members of the majority Sunni attacked them for so-called 
blasphemy. They continue to struggle in a makeshift camp in a sports stadium.

In 2006, President Yudhoyono issued a regulation on building houses of worship 
that makes it extremely difficult for religious minorities to construct their 
buildings. He signed a law that allows the listing of only six religions on 
Indonesian ID cards, basically discriminating against more than 350 other small 
religions. In 2009, Yudhoyono sent his cabinet members to defend the blasphemy 
law when it was challenged at the Constitutional Court. They mobilized Muslim 
militias to harass the petitioners and their lawyers. In April 2010, the 
Constitutional Court upheld the law, which provides criminal penalties for 
those who express religious beliefs that deviate from the six 
officially-recognized religions. The court said it is lawful to restrict 
minority beliefs because it allows for the "maintenance of public order." In 
2008, Yudhoyono issued an anti-Ahmadiyah decree, threatening to five years jail 
term for anyone who "propagates" the group's teachings. 

An ad hoc tribunal to investigate and prosecute the 1997-98 the disappearance 
of human rights activists has yet to be established, though it has been 
approved by the legislature. Yudhoyono's own coordinating minister for 
political, legal, and security affairs and Attorney General have rejected the 
official human rights commission's findings that the government's 
anti-Communist purges of 1965 and 1966 - which included mass killings of up to 
one million people, enslavement, torture, rape, and enforced disappearance  - 
constituted a crime against humanity. The truth commission and human rights 
courts authorized by the 2006 law on Aceh have yet to be established. There has 
been no accountability for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by 
Indonesian forces in Timor-Leste, where as many as 183,000 were killed, or West 
Papua, where an estimated 100,000 have died. 

On taking office, President Yudhoyono declared that solving the September 2004 
murder of Munir Said Thalib, Indonesia's best known human rights activist, 
would be a test of "whether Indonesia had changed." The President and Indonesia 
have failed the test. He has refused to release the report of the fact-finding 
team he set up early in his Presidency. The murder involved the national 
intelligence agency and serving and former military officers; none of them have 
been brought to justice.


Demonstration against the award in Jakarta. 

see also 

Human Rights Watch, In Religions Name Abuses against Religious Minorities in 
Indonesia 

East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN),   Human Rights & Justice page 

Amnesty International: Victims of the Aceh conflict still waiting for truth, 
justice and reparation 

Human Rights Watch Indonesia: Civilian Courts Should Try Abusive Soldiers

United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, 2013 annual report 

US Department of State: Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2012 - 
Indonesia 

Sign the petition today: http://s.shr.lc/19349F6 


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Donate today. Read ETAN's fund appeal: http://etan.org/etan/2013appeal.htm

John M. Miller, National Coordinator
East Timor & Indonesia Action Network (ETAN)
Phone: +1-718-596-7668 
Mobile phone: +1-917-690-4391 
Email: [email protected] Skype: john.m.miller 
Twitter: @etan009  Website: www.etan.org

2012 Recipient of the Order of Timor (Ordem Timor)

Send a blank e-mail message to [email protected] to for information on other ETAN 
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