February 22nd, 2008
Aide-Mémoire
7th UN Human Rights Council
3rd to 28th March 2008


Indonesia


The Government must act upon its international commitments to human rights

Since the beginning of its democratic transition in 1998, Indonesia has 
ratified several international human rights instruments, including the 
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the International 
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESC) and the Convention 
against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment 
(CAT). While these steps are welcomed, Indonesia has yet to act upon the 
obligations arising from these treaties.

Lack of Effective Habeas Corpus

Until now, the Indonesian Code of Criminal Procedure contradicts international 
standards of fair trial. The lack of legal safeguards for suspects and 
detainees leaves them vulnerable to human rights violations. Suspects are 
regularly detained for unduly long periods of detention without access to 
judges, legal counsel and independent medical examination. They are also rarely 
informed of their rights but denied basic rights such as the right to an 
interpreter, the right to visits by family members, the right to medical care 
and the right to remain silent.

Torture

As the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading 
Treatment or Punishment has pointed out after his recent visit to Indonesia, 
the lack of effective habeas corpus in law and practice facilitates the 
habitual torture of detainees by police and military officers. Also, Indonesia 
has thus far failed to criminalize torture in its Penal Code and to establish 
an independent complaints mechanism for victims of torture. Reminded of its 
obligation to do so under the CAT, the Indonesian government usually claims 
that this question is to be addressed in the revision of the Penal Code which 
is currently debated in 
parliament. However, reform of the Penal Code has been discussed since at least 
two decades without observable improvements. Countless torture victims cannot 
wait another two decades for access to legal remedy for their sufferings.

Death Penalty

The death penalty is still on the statute books in Indonesia and dozens of 
convicts are on the death row. Numerous civil society groups are calling for 
the abolition of the death penalty and a moratorium on pending executions. UN 
Special Rapporteur Nowak echoed this call, "given the lack of legal safeguards 
and doubts as to how confessions might have been obtained" in a country where 
torture appears to be the prime investigative method of the police.

Human Rights and Environmental Issues

National and international economic stakeholders exploit Indonesia's natural 
resources day by day without concern for the environmental destruction and 
threats to human rights they cause. The exploitation of natural resources 
correlates with myriads of land disputes. The national and international 
companies involved, often in collusion with the local police and military, 
force the inhabitants off their land. Rights of traditional owners, 
particularly indigenous people, to give their free, prior and informed consent 
to the development of their lands is increasingly recognized under 
international law but is usually still denied in Indonesia. Frequent protests 
from traditional land owners ensue, often resulting in a heavy crackdowns from 
the companies' own security forces, the police or the military. Protestors have 
been arrested, beaten and even killed.

Moreover, the sell out of Indonesian forests threatens the mere existence of 
the 60-90 million people who depend on the forests for 
their livelihood. Regarding agrofuels, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right 
to Food recently warned "that biofuels will bring hunger in their wake. The 
sudden, ill-conceived, rush to convert food - such as maize, wheat, sugar and 
palm oil - into fuels is a recipe for disaster. There are serious risks of 
creating a battle between food and fuel that will leave the poor and hungry in 
developing countries at the mercy of rapidly rising prices for food, land and 
water. If agro-industrial methods are pursued to turn food into fuel, then 
there are risks that unemployment and violations of the right to food may 
result".


Human Rights and Religious Issues

Increasing Restrictions on Personal - Especially Women's - Rights and Freedoms

Aceh is so far the only province where the shari'a is officially in place. In 
other areas, local governments have enacted regional bylaws introducing 
shari'a-inspired regulations. These in some cases infringe on personal rights 
and freedoms, especially on women's rights. For example, school girls - even 
non-Muslims - are forced to wear head scarves at school, and in some areas 
police raids and trials against unmarried couples have taken place. The 
implementation of inhuman and degrading punishments like public caning has been 
reported from Aceh. The national government evades its responsibility to ensure 
that regional legislation conforms to the constitution and Indonesia's 
international human rights obligations by hiding itself behind an ill-conceived 
notion of regional and special autonomy, respectively.

Failure to Protect Religious Freedoms

The state also frequently fails to protect religious freedoms of minority faith 
groups. In 2007, at least 92 members of religious 
minorities have been arrested and at least 93 cases where the police failed to 
prevent religious extremists from attacking or forcibly 
closing down places of worship have been reported. Members of Al-Qiyadah 
al-Islamiyah suffered the biggest number of these violations, followed by 
Christians and adherents to the Ahmadiyah-faith.


Impunity

Past Abuses

Ten years into democratic transition, Indonesia has made no progress concerning 
the prosecution of gross human rights violations committed under the 33-year 
long reign of autocrat Suharto. The ad hoc-human rights tribunals for 
atrocities committed in East Timor 1999 and Tanjung Priok 1984, the only trials 
for past violations of international humanitarian law so far, have failed to 
bring justice to the victims. Numerous other cases, e.g. the slaughter of 
hundreds of thousands of alleged communists in 1965 or the 
countless abuses committed during the downfall of Suharto, have so far not been 
tried before an ad hoc-court due to the inaction of the attorney general, 
parliament and president.

In order to ensure that these cases are treated according to international 
criminal law standards, the authority to decide whether a 
certain case constitutes a gross violation of human rights, which currently 
lies with the parliament and the president, must be 
transferred to the judiciary. Moreover, as the experiences of the trials for 
East Timor and Tanjung Priok have shown, reforms to enhance the independence of 
the judiciary as well as to establish civilian supremacy over the military, 
police and intelligence services are needed to ensure that human rights-trials 
are conducted in a free, fair and objective manner.

In order to prevent future human rights violations and to fulfil the victims' 
right to truth and justice, Indonesia must come to terms 
with its violent past. Besides ad hoc-human rights courts, truth commissions 
provide a useful instrument for this endeavour. The 2004 Law on the Truth and 
Reconciliation Commission was to create such a commission but empowered it to 
award amnesty to the perpetrators. It also made compensation for victims 
contingent on their signing formal statements of forgiving the 
perpetrators. Last year, the law was annulled by the Constitutional Court as it 
deemed these provisions contradictory to the constitution and Indonesia's 
international obligations. As a truth commission is still mandated by national 
legislation, the annulment of the law provides an opportunity for its 
reformulation in accordance with international standards.

Present Abuses

Impunity is also still enjoyed by those responsible for human rights violations 
committed after the end of the Suharto-regime. In the most prominent case, the 
poisoning of reputable human rights-lawyer Munir Said Thalib in 2004, two 
persons have been sentenced to one and 20 years imprisonment, respectively. 
However, the findings of the presidential fact-finding team that strongly 
indicate the involvement of the state intelligence agency BIN, especially its 
deputy, Muchdi PR, and its former director, General Hendropriyono, have been 
ignored by investigators.

The ensuing climate of impunity breeds new violations. In May 2007, navy 
officers killed four and injured seven persons in Alas Tlogo village near 
Pasuruan, East Java, in a dispute over a piece land claimed by the navy. This 
shows that not only in conflict areas the Indonesian military still considers 
itself as standing above the law.

Impunity in Aceh

Impunity is also a major concern in Aceh, where decades of armed conflict have 
left a long legacy of abuse. The Helsinki peace agreement between the 
government of Indonesia and the Free Aceh Movement as well as the Law on Aceh 
call for the establishment of an ad hoc-human rights court and a local truth 
and reconciliation commission to deal with human rights violations committed 
during the conflict. So far nothing has been done to implement this commitment.

Impunity in Papua

In Papua, those tried before the permanent human rights court for killings and 
torture during the Abepura incident in 2000 have been acquitted three years 
ago. For two other recent cases, the incidents of Wamena (2003) and Wasior 
(2001), the National Human Rights Commission has conducted inquiries concluding 
that gross human rights violations took place. However, the attorney general 
has failed to act upon these findings.

In 2007, Colonel Burhanuddin Siagian was appointed as regional military 
commander in Papua. He has been indicted by the United 
Nations for crimes against humanity in East Timor, including forming militias 
responsible for human rights violations.

The Situation of Human Rights Defenders

The climate of impunity and the massive deployment of military troops over the 
past three years make human rights violations an 
everyday occurrence in Papua. As UN Special Rapporteur Hina Jilani noted 
recently, the situation of human rights defenders is 
especially grave in that region. They are stigmatized as supporters of Papuan 
independence and face assassination, torture, arbitrary detention, intimidation 
and other forms of violence by the security forces. While currently the 
situation of human rights defenders in other parts of Indonesia may be not as 
severe as in Papua, they frequently face similar problems.


On the basis of the situation outlined above, we recommend the following to the 
7nd UN Human Rights Council: 

to urge the GoI to introduce effective habeas corpus and other legal safeguards 
in order to bring the Indonesian Code of Criminal Procedure into accordance 
with international standards; to urge the GoI to criminalize torture in 
accordance with the definition contained in article 1 of the Convention against 
Torture and impose appropriate penalties;

to urge the GoI to introduce an independent and effective complaints mechanism 
for victims of torture in all places of detention as well as· 

to encourage the GoI to accede to the Optional Protocol to the Convention 
against Torture, and establish an independent national 
body to monitor places of detention as stipulated in the Protocol;

to encourage the GoI to accede to the Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR 
aiming at the abolition of the death penalty;

 to urge the GoI to ensure the full protection of economic, social and cultural 
rights, especially the rights to food and adequate housing;

 to urge the GoI to protect the rights of indigenous people;

to urge the GoI to protect individual - particularly women's - rights and 
freedoms in law and practice and to take appropriate steps in cases where they 
are violated or threatened to be violated;

to urge the GoI to review the Law on Special Autonomy for Aceh and local bylaws 
establishing shari'a-like regulations and 
punishments in the light of the constitution and its international human rights 
obligations;

to urge the GoI to ensure that the religious freedoms of minority faith groups 
are protected by the state;

 to urge the GoI to reform the law on human rights courts so that the decision 
to establish an ad hoc-human rights court is placed 
in the hands of the judiciary;

to encourage and assist the GoI to undertake further and sustainable steps to 
establish an independent judiciary which is free 
of corruption and fear;

 to encourage and assist the GoI to establish effective civilian control over 
the military;
 
to offer assistance to the GoI to reformulate the Law on the Truth and 
Reconciliation Commission in accordance with international standards; 

to urge the GoI to invite the Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or 
Arbitrary Executions and to agree to an investigation into the murder of Munir 
by an independent team involving UN-mandated experts; 

to call on the GoI to establish an ad hoc-human rights court for abuses 
committed in Aceh during the armed conflict and to establish a truth commission 
for Aceh regardless of developments regarding the law on the nation-wide truth 
commission; 

to call on the GoI to deal with human rights abuses in Papua promptly and to 
ensure the adherence to fundamental human rights by the security forces in the 
region.



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