Indonesian Government's failure
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 31,
2012
ALRC-CWS-21-05-2012
Language(s): English
only
HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL
Twenty-first session,
Agenda Item 6
A written statement submitted
by the Asian Legal Resource Centre (ALRC), a
non-governmental organisation with general consultative
status
INDONESIA: The ALRC calls for
intervention by concerned states in light of the Indonesian
Government's failure to accept key UPR
recommendations
The Asian Legal Resource Centre
(ALRC) would like to bring the attention of the Human Rights
Council (HRC) concerns relating to Indonesia's Universal
Periodic Review (UPR) during the 13th session of the Working
Group on the UPR, notably with regard to the Indonesian
Government's failure to accept key recommendations that, if
implemented, could have a positive effect on the protection
of human rights in the country. The ALRC is taking this
opportunity to urge members of the Working Group that made
such recommendations to urge the Indonesian Government to
accept these recommendations as part of the UPR’s outcome
report adoption process during the upcoming 21st session of
the HRC in September 2012. The value of the UPR with regard
to human rights in Indonesia, and the credibility of the
government’s approach and levels of cooperation with this
mechanism hinge not only on the quantity, but in particular
on the quality of recommendations that the government agrees
to accept and implement.
While the Indonesian government
agreed to a number of 'general' recommendations concerning
the enhancement of the protection of minorities, the
improvement of the human rights situation in Papua, and the
elimination of impunity, its commitment to achieve such
goals in reality remains in doubt, given its rejection of a
number of more specific and concrete recommendations
concerning these issues.
During Indonesia's UPR review on
May 23, 2012, as part of the 13th session of the UPR Working
Group, various countries highlighted the issue of impunity
within the country and recommended that the government take
measures to combat this problem. Slovenia, for instance,
recommended that the Indonesian government 'ensure all cases
of human rights violations are impartially investigated and
prosecuted in proportion with the crimes committed.'
Similarly, Australia recommended that the government
‘ensure fair and proper legal action in relation to those
investigated and prosecuted, including impartial trials and
reasonable sentences ... that meets international norms,’
whereas Germany specifically requested Indonesia to hold
accountable officials responsible for human rights
violations in the Papuan provinces.
The aforementioned
recommendations on impunity, along with similar other ones
proposed by Canada and Austria, enjoyed the support of
Indonesia. While this is to be welcomed as a first step, the
ALRC is concerned by the fact that the government failed to
accept the more specific and therefore useful recommendation
made by Switzerland, which calls for the government to
ensure that cases of human rights abuses against prisoners
should be dealt with by civilian courts instead of military
courts. The ALRC has raised concerns about the use of
military courts in submissions to the HRC in recent
sessions, notably given that these lack transparency and do
not meet the internationally accepted standards concerning
fair trials. Cases of torture against indigenous Papuans by
members of the military that the ALRC has documented, for
example, have illustrated how even in high profile cases,
the perpetrators of serious human rights violations
typically either enjoy complete impunity or are handed minor
and grossly inadequate sentences as the result of trials by
military tribunals.
The ALRC therefore urges the
Indonesian Government to show its commitment to taking
specific measures that can have a concrete impact on the
current problem of impunity, notably by agreeing to accept
and implement Switzerland’s recommendation, and more
widely by ensuring that all allegations of violations of
human rights by members of the military against civilians
should be tried by civilian courts, with the full
cooperation of the military. In doing so, it should agree as
a first step, to revise its current Law No. 31 Year 1997 on
Military Courts, which grants authority to military courts
to try crimes committed by military officials, even if such
crimes do not have any military nature.
This provision
within the Indonesian Military Court Law lies in
contradiction with international human rights standards
which call for the perpetrators of human rights abuses to be
tried by independent and impartial courts. The UN Human
Rights Committee has repeatedly emphasised that jurisdiction
of military tribunals should be limited to military offences
committed by military personnel. This standard is also
established under the UN Principles Governing the
Administration of Justice through Military Tribunals, one of
the provisions of which reads: 'the jurisdiction of military
courts should be limited to offences of a strictly military
nature committed by military personnel. Military courts may
try persons treated as military personnel for infractions
strictly related to their military status.'
In addition
to the issue of impunity, concerns as to the Indonesian
government’s half-hearted commitment to human rights can
be seen in the way it deals with recommendations related to
the protection of religious minorities in the country. In
his statement during the UPR session, Indonesian Foreign
Affairs Minister Marty Natalegawa claimed that ‘Indonesia
attaches the highest priority to the issue of freedom of
religion’ and promised that the government is determined
to address religious intolerance cases 'and ensure
followers, such as Ahmadis, were able to practice their
faith and belief in a good manner’. Indonesia later
supported recommendations concerning freedom of religion
made by New Zealand, Norway, Switzerland and Sweden, which
made general recommendations concerning the need to review
laws and decrees that are not in accordance with
international standards concerning the freedom of religion.
However, the government’s will to address this problem is
cast into doubt by its unwillingness to accept a more
specific recommendation made by Denmark, which called for
the revision of 1965 Blasphemy Law, the 1969 and 2006
Ministerial Regulations on Building Houses of Worship and
Religious Harmony, as well as the 2008 Joint Ministerial
Decrees on Ahmadiyah. The ALRC is aware that the Ministerial
Regulations and Decrees are exclusively under the authority
of the executive branch of government. The revision or
repeal of such regulations can therefore be carried out
without any delay by the government, should it so decide.
Furthermore, laws in Indonesia are produced jointly by the
executive and the parliament. The government should
therefore take the initiative and urge the parliament to
revise the Blasphemy Law in line with international human
rights law and standards, or repeal it
altogether.
Continuing violations of the freedom of
religion following the UPR review do little to convince that
the Indonesian government is serious about taking steps to
address the problem. In June 2012, an atheist named
Alexander Aan was found guilty and sentenced to two and a
half years imprisonment for disseminating religious hatred
on the internet under an excessively vague provision in the
controversial Electronic Information and Transaction Law. In
July 2012, Tajul Muluk - a Shia leader in Sampang, East Java
- was also sentenced to two years imprisonment for
conducting religious blasphemy as prohibited under Article
156a point a of the Indonesian Penal Code. In the same
month, the residence area of Ahmadiyah community in
Cisalada, Bogor, was attacked by a mob. Several houses were
reportedly damaged and four people were injured, yet there
have been no legal measures taken by the authorities against
the perpetrators of the attack to date.
The ALRC would
like to emphasise that Indonesia's international human
rights obligations are binding on all branches of the
government. The UN Human Rights Committee in its General
Comment No. 31 has established that ‘The executive branch
that usually represents the State Party internationally,
including before the Committee, may not point to the fact
that an action incompatible with the provisions of the
Covenant was carried out by another branch of government as
a means of seeking to relieve the State Party from
responsibility for the action and consequent
incompatibility.' Therefore, although the legal proceeding
of cases related to freedom of religion falls into the scope
of the judiciary’s authority, the Indonesian government
cannot claim that it is not their responsibility to ensure
the prosecution of religious minority groups, especially
given the fact that prosecution is conducted by the Attorney
General’s Office, which is part of the executive.
The
ALRC is also concerned by the Indonesian Government’s
rejection of key recommendations related to the improvement
of the human rights situation in Papua. The ALRC welcomes
the fact that Indonesia accepted several recommendations
related to Papua, such as that made by New Zealand
concerning the need to conduct training for security
officers in Papua, and the recommendation made by France
regarding the granting of access for civil society and
national journalists in the region.
However, the ALRC is
of the view that more comprehensive measures should be
adopted by the government if it is seriously determined to
address the human rights issues in Papua and West Papua.
These should include: granting full access to Papuan
provinces to the ICRC, as recommended by Germany; inviting
the UN Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous
peoples to Papua, as urged by Mexico; and to immediately end
human rights violations by security officers and impunity in
Papua, as recommended by Japan. Indonesia should also
support Canada’s recommendation calling for increased
protection for human rights defenders in Papua and for
respect for freedom of expression in the region. Canada also
recommended the review of regulations that can be used to
restrict political expression, especially Articles 106 and
110 of the Penal Code, and to release the political
prisoners in Papua. The United States similarly called for
the halt of prosecutions under Articles 106 and 110 of the
Penal Code and the re-evaluation of convictions as well as
sentences of individuals charged under such articles. The
recommendation made by France regarding full and free access
to the Papuan provinces for foreign journalists should also
enjoy the support of the Indonesian government.
The ALRC
notes with concern that there has been an escalation of
violence in Papua after the UPR session last May, despite
the government having been criticised for its human rights
record in the region. The violent dispersal of a peaceful
demonstration by Komite Nasional Papua Barat (West Papua
National Committee, KNPB), the shooting of KNPB’s
Secretary General, Mako Tabuni, and the persecution of
KNPB’s activists are a few examples of human rights abuses
took place after the UPR session.
Given the above, the
ALRC requests the intervention of the members and observers
of the Human Rights Council, notably the governments
involved in making the key recommendations cited above
during Indonesia’s UPR, to urge the Indonesian Government
to:
a. Demonstrate its full commitment to combat impunity
by supporting the recommendation proposed by Switzerland
concerning the need to try members of the military that are
accused of abuses against prisoners in civilian courts and
therefore by committing to revise Law No. 31 Year 1997 on
Military Courts. The revision of the law should ensure that
military officers who commit human rights abuses and other
crimes which do not have any military characteristics are
tried in independent civilian criminal courts.
b. Take
concrete steps to end the persecution of and discrimination
against religious minority groups, notably by accepting and
committing to fully implement the recommendation made by
Denmark to repeal the 1965 Blasphemy Law as well as to
revise the 1969 and 2006 Ministerial Regulations on Building
Houses of Worship and Religious Harmony, and the 2008 Joint
Ministerial Decrees on Ahmadiyah. The Indonesian Government
should also take legal measures to bring those who persecute
and discriminate against members of religious minority
groups to justice.
c. Adopt a set of comprehensive
measures to address the issue of human rights violations in
Papua, including full access for national and international
journalists, the ICRC and the UN Special Procedures to the
Papuan provinces. Protection of human rights defenders
should be guaranteed and undue prosecutions against them
halted. Any regulations that disproportionately restrict
freedom of expression such as Articles 106 and 110 of the
Penal Code, should be revoked, and convictions and
punishments of individuals under these should be
re-evaluated.
# # #
About the ALRC:
The Asian Legal Resource Centre is an independent regional
non-governmental organisation holding general consultative
status with the Economic and Social Council of the United
Nations. It is the sister organisation of the Asian Human
Rights Commission. The Hong Kong-based group seeks to
strengthen and encourage positive action on legal and human
rights issues at the local and national levels throughout
Asia.
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