http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2009/06/29/the-human-rights-agenda.html

The human rights agenda
The Jakarta Post   |  Mon, 06/29/2009 9:36 AM  |  Opinion 

The release of two separate human rights reports in the past weeks could not be 
timelier given the fact that Indonesians will vote for their next president 
next week.   

Unfinished Business - Police Accountability in Indonesia, a report by the 
London-based International Amnesty, and What Did I Do Wrong? Papuans in Merauke 
Face Abuses by Indonesian Special Forces, released by the New York-based Human 
Rights Watch, should remind the nation that the reforms begun after the 
collapse of the authoritarian Soeharto regime in 1998 must continue. 

Our claim to be the world's third largest democracy will be seriously 
compromised unless the presidential candidates address these reports, from two 
credible international institutions, and heed their recommendations. 

Sadly, all three candidates and their running mates have consistently skirted 
the human rights issue completely. Each time questions have been raised about 
the abuses committed during the Soeharto years, the candidates insist they have 
all been resolved and that there is nothing more to be done - end of 
discussion. 

This is sad indeed because, as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch 
reported, the culture of impunity for vagrant abuses by powerful state 
institutions in this country remains in tact. Anyone looking for examples of 
Fareed Zakaria's "illiberal democracy" need look no further than Indonesia, its 
living proof, at least going by these reports. One would be tempted to call 
Indonesia an illiberal and unjust democracy. 

The National Police and Kopassus (Army Special Forces) that the reports single 
out for their continued human rights abuses have undergone some reforms in the 
last 11 years, but clearly these have not been far reaching enough. 

Granted, the victims of these reported human rights abuses are specific groups 
and not the public in general, as was the case in the past; but that does not 
make it right. Amnesty International said "criminal suspects living in poor and 
marginalized communities, in particular women and repeat offenders, suffer 
disproportionately from a range of human rights violations." The Human Rights 
Watch report was more specific, detailing the abuse of residents of Merauke, a 
town in the southeast corner of Papua province suspected of harboring 
separatists and their sympathizers. 

Victims interviewed in the reports gave graphic details of the kind of torture 
methods employed by the police and the Kopassus to coerce them into giving 
incriminating confessions, or, in the case of the police, to extort bribes. 
These interrogation techniques are unacceptable in a democratic and civilized 
nation. 

In the Soeharto years, reports of abuses in Indonesia were main staples for 
human rights organizations; the regime simply chose to ignore and deny the 
allegations. The government, and those institutions named in the report, would 
be making a grave mistake to simply dismiss these reports this time around. A 
credible and independent inquiry, as both reports proposed, must be conducted 
using the materials gathered by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. 

Since Indonesia is in election mode, now is the time to ensure all candidates 
public commit to improving human rights for all people in Indonesia. 

We have three generals running for office: the incumbent president Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono and vice presidential candidates Wiranto and Prabowo Subianto 
(himself a former Kopassus chief). 

Given their military backgrounds, they should be more than familiar with the 
human rights problems in Indonesia. They can either end this culture of 
impunity once and for all, or maintain it. Let's hope Indonesia makes the right 
choice. 


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