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September, 30 2005 @ 09:53 pm
Coup '65: Justice Demanded For 1965 Victims
On the 40th anniversary of the 1965 internal Army putsch that inadvertently led
to the overthrow of founding president Sukarno by dictator Suharto and the
worst massacres in Indonesia's history, a prominent former political prisoner
and human rights campaigner has demanded justice for the victims.
London-born Carmel Budiardjo, who spent more than three years in jail in
Indonesia without trial from September 1968 until January 1971, is the founder
of the UK-based Indonesia Human Rights Campaign (TAPOL).
In an article to be published in TAPOL Bulletin 180, Budiardjo reflects on the
events of 40 years ago that brought Suharto to power and plunged Indonesia
"into the darkest era in its history since becoming an independent state in
1945".
Following is her article, via the TAPOL website.
Forty years on, justice and comprehensive rehabilitation for the 1965 victims
26 September 2005
(This article will be published in TAPOL Bulletin 180)
As the month of October approaches, our thoughts inevitably dwell once again on
the events forty years ago when Indonesia was plunged into the darkest era in
its history since becoming an independent state in 1945.
While historians still dispute the intentions of the group of army officers who
staged a coup attempt on 1 October 1965, kidnapping and killing a group of
senior army officers, there is no dispute about what happened afterwards.
Suharto, then a major-general, was not among the officers kidnapped, leaving
him free to strike back at the conspirators, most of whom were killed. He then
turned his attention to the popular President Sukarno, gradually undermining
his position to the point where he was able to seize the presidency in March
1966.
In the months following Suharto's intervention on 1 October 1965, a white
terror directed against the Indonesian Communist Party, the PKI, and mass
organisations associated with it, led to hundreds of thousands of deaths, some
at the hands of the military acting on Suharto's orders, and many more at the
hands of mostly Muslim and Nationalist mobs inflamed by anti-communist
propaganda. The killings were incited in particular by false allegations that
members of the left-wing women's organisation, Gerwani, had been involved in
sexual depravities at the base where the kidnapped generals were taken.
An estimated 1.7 million people were thrown into prison in the six months
following Suharto's takeover. Many of these men and women lost their lives in
prisons across the country, at the hands of torturers or because of
malnutrition. In the early 1970s, the number of detainees was still around
70,000, most of whom were held without charge or trial until 1979. In 1969,
12,000 male prisoners were banished to the remote prison island of Buru where
hundreds died of starvation or mal-treatment. Hundreds of women were dispatched
to Plantungan, a detention centre in Central Java which had formerly been a
leprosy colony.
About two hundred of those arrested, mostly military men or senior PKI figures,
were brought to trial to legitimise Suharto's allegation that the PKI had
organised the events of 30 September and were planning to depose Sukarno, but
the vast majority were never tried.
In the decade which followed the events of 1965, Indonesia was high on the list
of human rights violators with the largest number of untried political
prisoners in the world. No fewer that two dozen discriminatory laws and
regulations were enacted during the Suharto era, almost all of which are still
on the statute books. One such law is a resolution adopted by the upper house,
the MPR, in 1966 which outlaws the teaching of Marxism-Leninism. An attempt by
President Abdurrahman Wahid in 2000 to repeal this provoked furious protests,
forcing him to give up the idea.
Under growing international pressure, which further intensified following
Indonesia's invasion of East Timor in December 1975, Suharto's New Order was
forced to start releasing the prisoners and by the end of 1979,virtually all
the prisoners had been set free.
But release from prison left the ex-tapols (short for tahanan politik,
political prisoner) as they were known, in a state of limbo, not free in the
true sense of the word. Stacked against them was a system of discrimination
which has dogged them, their offspring and even their children's offspring ever
since.
A Home Affairs ministerial decree in 1981, which provided for the
'comprehensive surveillance and political "rehabilitation"' of ex-tapols, is
still used today to legitimise discriminatory practices, particularly at the
local level. The insertion of the initials 'ET' for ex-tapol on identity cards
helped to reinforce the stigma; although officially banned, similar practices
still persist in some places. According to one regulation, while persons over
60 years can obtained a life-long identity card with a single application,
elderly ex-tapols must renew their cards every three years. There are estimated
to be at least two dozen laws and regulations still on the statute books
imposing discrimination of one sort or another against ex-tapols and their
families and against the teaching of Marxism-Leninism.
Article 60 (g) of the 2003 Law on General Elections banned anyone 'directly or
indirectly involved' in the October 1965 events from standing as candidates for
local, provincial or national assemblies. The ban was lifted by the
Constitutional Court in 2004 for being discriminatory and unconstitutional. But
this is the only discriminatory regulation to have been repealed. The Court
does not have the power to review laws passed prior to October 1999 (when the
Indonesian Constitution was amended for the first time) yet most discriminatory
laws were enacted before that date. A Class Action against all five
post-Suharto presidents, which was filed by a group of victims along with some
political luminaries in 2004 to seek compensation for the millions held without
trial, is still stuck in the courts.
Of all the post-Suharto presidents, only Abdurrahman Wahid (Gus Dur), during
his presidency from October 1999 to July 2001, took action to remove some of
the most blatant discriminations, including the repeal of litsus ('special
investigations' to which prisoners were subjected to determine whether they had
a 'clean environment'). He also made a public apology to the victims, speaking
also for his organisation, the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), many of whose members took
part in the killings.
As a consequence of these laws and regulations, the Indonesian State has
enforced a system which breeds prejudice against millions of its citizens.
The Stigma Persists
This deplorable situation, with so many discriminatory laws still in force,
means that the stigma attached to being an ex-tapol persists against people who
were held without due process and imprisoned for years without ever being tried
and found guilty of anything.
During the past few months, there have been many stories in the Indonesian
press about continued stigmatisation. The following cases give but a taster of
the true scale of the problem.
a.. Tjahyono, chair of his local Institute of the Struggle for the
Rehabilitation of Victims of the New Order, who spent ten years in
Nusakembangan Island prison and on Buru, says he won't feel free until he is
rehabilitated and the historical record is rectified. His children who, as
infants, spent time in a juvenile detention centre, still suffer the
consequences of his past. One daughter has 001 (distinguishing her as the child
of a 1965 victim) marked on her ID. As a result, she has been denied any
teaching jobs, so makes a living as a dressmaker. His son has been refused a
job in the civil service.
b.. Gusti, now 85 years, has been forced, along with 175 other ex-tapols, to
relocate to Argosari, an isolated village in East Kalimantan. Oentung, another
ex-tapol in Argosari, spent ten years in a string of prisons. The reason for
his incarceration was his devotion to the Javanese traditional drama, ludruk,
that led him to join the cultural organisation, LEKRA, which had close ties
with the PKI. Another inmate of Argosari is Kasran, 81, located there because
he joined the peasants' organisation, BTI. His children were taunted as 'PKI
children' and 'children of a murderer' by their schoolmates, forcing them to
quit their school.
c.. Verdi Ishak, the 45-year old son of the publisher Joesoef Ishak, is a
sociologist, unable to find work in his own field; he now works at a foreign
embassy.
d..
Rehabilitation, the Way Forward
Forty years have passed since the events of October 1965, and seven years have
elapsed since the downfall of the architect of the New Order, Suharto. It is
now time for the pain and misery inflicted on these innocent victims to end.
A comprehensive act of rehabilitation is long overdue. This should consist of:
A comprehensive act of rehabilitation is long overdue. This should consist of:
1.. A Presidential Decree granting full rehabilitation and restitution to all
the victims of 1965 and their offspring.
2.. The restoration of the civil and legal rights of the victims of 1965.
3.. A Presidential Decree annulling all the discriminatory laws and
regulations introduced since 1965.
4.. The creation of an independent commission of historians and civil and
political figures to review the historical records, to provide a true
accounting of what happened in 1965 and after.
Suharto must be tried
While millions of his victims still suffer from the continuation of
discrimination, Suharto the architect of their sufferings, lives in secluded
luxury with his children who enriched themselves during his years in power. In
2004, he faced charges of corruption, but the trial was adjourned on grounds of
ill-health. In May this year, the government of President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono announced that no further action would be taken against him.
The government should rescind this decision and acknowledge that the man who
was responsible for the calamity that befell Indonesia from 1965 - 1998 should
be brought to account for his crimes against humanity. He must not be allowed
to go unpunished.
By: Roy Tupai | Category: Coup '65
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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