Indonesia's new symbol for injustice: Sandals
10:34 AM Wednesday Jan 4, 2012 

Indonesians have found a new symbol for their growing frustration at uneven 
justice in their young, democratic nation: cheap, worn-out flip-flops.

They have been dropping them off at police stations all over the sprawling 
archipelago to express outrage over the arrest and trial of a 15-year-old boy 
for lifting an old pair of white sandals from outside a boarding house used by 
police in northern Indonesia.

"This is insane," said Titis Anissa, a high school teacher in the capital, 
Jakarta, noting that government officials found guilty of plundering state 
coffers get off with a slap on the wrist. "And a young, poor boy takes a pair 
of $3 sandals? Enough already!"

The boy snatched the shoes while he and several friends headed home from school 
in Palu, the capital of Central Sulawesi province, in November 2010.

He was later interrogated and badly beaten by three officers, and faces up to 
five years in prison if found guilty - the same sentence given to many 
terrorists, drug pushers and rapists.

He will appear Wednesday before the court in Palu for the second hearing of his 
trial, which opened last month.

Indonesia has made tremendous strides since the ouster of longtime dictator 
Suharto just over a decade ago, implementing sweeping reforms that have freed 
up the media, scrapped oppressive laws and given citizens the right to directly 
pick their leaders for the first time.

But the judicial system remains a weak point. The flip-flop case has captured 
headlines since the trial began and is one of the most popular trends on social 
networking sites like Facebook and Twitter.

Thousands have joined in the sandal donation protest.

A batch of 1,000 flip-flops will be given to Sgt. Ahmad Rusdi Harahap, owner of 
the stolen shoes, as "compensation," said campaign organizer Budhi Kurniawan.

The boy, not identified by name because of his age, said he found the dirty old 
flip-flops near a garbage bin outside the boarding house. Six months later, he 
was summoned by Harahap, who accused him of theft.

"At first, I didn't understand what he was talking about," he told The 
Associated Press. "I'd forgotten all about those sandals."

"He called a few of his colleagues and they started beating me up, hitting me 
with a piece of wood," he said. "I fell into a steep trench. My legs were 
bleeding."

The boy said the officers made him promise to give each a new pair of sandals, 
but his father, after seeing the cuts and bruises on his son's body, decided to 
report the men to their superiors.

Harahap, who along with the other two officers is facing charges of violating 
police ethics, responded by taking the teenager to criminal court.

It was a move Andreas Harsono, of the New York-based group Human Rights Watch, 
said was obviously "excessive" and vindictive.

Ayu Laksmi, a Balinese artist, brought 10 pairs of sandals to the National 
Commission for Child Protection on Tuesday to show her displeasure.

"This just goes to show, once again, that our laws discriminate," she said. 
"It's tough on the poor and weak when it comes to those with money or power."

The teenager is not the first minor to face trial over a small criminal offence.

Last year, a 14-year-old boy was brought to court after spending three weeks in 
a Jakarta prison for allegedly stealing a $1.15 cellphone voucher.

Judges finally dropped the charges, arguing the investigation of the case was 
"defective."

- AP
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/ar ... 28&ref=rss

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