http://www.policyforum.net/islamist-rule-law-indonesia/

Indonesia
The threat to Indonesian democracy

Melissa Crouch



Arts, culture & society, Government and governance, Law | Asia, Southeast Asia

2 December 2016

The instruments and institutions of the law are being used for the purposes of 
violence, intimidation, and coercion in Indonesia, Melissa Crouch writes.


The great paradox of Indonesian democracy is on display for all the world to 
see.

On the one hand, there is greater freedom of expression and association for 
all. But on the other, this has given fuel to Islamists to espouse lawlessness 
and violence in the absence of a strong state.

Today a major rally in Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, will be held to call for 
the arrest of Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama (‘Ahok’). A crowd of over 200,000 
is expected – double the number of previous demonstrators on 4 November 2016. 
This crowd is to be matched by just 20,000 police and military personnel.

This is the second rally that has been held demanding his arrest in light of 
criminal investigations for blasphemy. The blasphemy case against Ahok has 
already been submitted by the Attorney General to the North Jakarta District 
Court.

In part, the case rests on a statement made by Ahok in which he referred to a 
verse of the Quran that is often used by Islamists as a reason why Muslims 
should not support non-Muslim politicians. Ahok himself is Christian.

While the next elections for governor are to be held in February 2017, the 
Attorney General’s Office has indicated that the case may proceed to trial 
quickly. Given that there may be several avenues for appeal, the case is still 
likely to stretch beyond this timeline.

In many ways, the rally is inherent with contradictions and can be seen as an 
example of Islamist rule by law in Indonesia.

The call to demonstrate on 2 December was led by Munarman, infamous as a former 
human rights lawyer turned radical leader of the Islamic Defenders Front.

Munarman’s fall from the inner circles of human rights activists into the arms 
of Islamists is one of Indonesia’s greatest post-reform crises. He was a key 
leader in both Indonesian Legal Aid, known as ‘LBH’, and Kontras, a key human 
rights organisation.

Yet like many activists, Munarman appears to have become disillusioned with the 
post-reform struggle. In addition, he was perhaps deeply affected by the murder 
of Munir Said Thalib, a former high-profile human rights activist and close 
colleague, poisoned by an agent of Indonesia’s National Intelligence Agency.

In 2002, Munarman became leader of the prominent Indonesian Legal Aid Institute 
Foundation in Jakarta. Yet in the years following, he seems to have shifted 
from support for the ideals of pluralism, democracy, religious freedom and the 
rule of law to publicly spouting highly intolerant views and open hostility to 
religious difference.

Munarman fell in with Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia, an Islamist organisation that 
calls for the creation of a worldwide Islamic state and is known for its 
conservative views. In 2006, this led to an internal move within YLBHI to oust 
him from leadership. Munarman turned his attention to exposing and denouncing 
so-called ‘deviant’ Islamic beliefs.

Around 2008, Munarman became involved in the Islamic Defenders Front, which is 
well-known for its willingness to use intimidation and violence against 
religious minorities. He was even involved in the infamous rally in 2008 that 
resulted in an attack on a National Alliance for the Freedom of Faith and 
Religion, known as the ‘Monas tragedy’.

Munarman was jailed for his involvement. Since being released from prison, 
Munarman has made a point of openly opposing the kinds of values human rights 
activists – epitomised in the work of organisations such as LBH and Kontras – 
have struggled so long for.

In many ways, Munarman’s stance represents the great paradox of Indonesian 
democracy. Post-1998 democratisation has given greater voice to Islamic 
organisations who use their freedom to promote an Islamist agenda that claims 
to uphold the law. In fact, they subvert it.

In Ahok’s case, by demanding that the police have been too slow, Islamists put 
pressure on the police to hasten the process. By demanding that the Attorney 
General arrest Ahok, they are already presuming charges will be laid.

By a show of force in the capital, Islamists issue an implicit threat to the 
judiciary who may hear the case – we will mob your courtroom next.

So much for a fair and impartial hearing.

If the case goes to trial, Ahok will face a sentence of up to five years prison

This should lead to deeper questions regarding the relevance of the blasphemy 
law in post-reform Indonesia. For many years now, human rights activists have 
acknowledged the abuse of the blasphemy law, particularly against minority 
groups in Indonesia.

Yet efforts to reform the law have been unsuccessful. The government has 
suggested the introduction of a Law on Inter-religious Harmony, a key pillar of 
which would be a provision reformulating the crime of blasphemy.

While human rights activists initially rejected this overt effort by the state 
to regulate religion, there were some attempts made to work within this draft 
proposal. Rather than abolishing the blasphemy law, activists sought a middle 
ground by trying to reformulate the crime of blasphemy.

But these efforts are based on the assumption that blasphemy should be a 
criminal offence regulated by the state. It also assumes that law enforcement 
agencies can implement the law objectively.

Yet legal institutions in Indonesia are largely powerless against the 
increasing tide of Islamist rule by law. Lawyers and former champions of human 
rights such as Munarman are the driving force behind this tide.

This is a rule by law that uses the instruments and institutions of the law in 
a way that is backed by violence, intimidation and coercion. It is in this 
respect that Islamist rule by law has become the greatest threat to the future 
of Indonesian democracy.

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