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- TITLE: INDONESIA HUMAN RIGHTS PRACTICES, 1994
- AUTHOR: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
- DATE: FEBRUARY 1995
-
- INDONESIA
-
-
- The Indonesian political system, despite a surface adherence to
- democratic forms, remains strongly authoritarian. President
- Soeharto, now in his sixth 5-year term, a small group of
- advisers, and the military dominate the political life of this
- heavily populated developing country, whose people come from
- hundreds of different cultural, linguistic, and ethnic
- backgrounds. The Government requires allegiance to a state
- ideology known as "Pancasila," which includes belief in a
- supreme god, a just and civilized humanity, national unity,
- democracy, and social justice. It has used Pancasila as a
- justification for restricting the development of opposition
- elements.
-
- Under a doctrine of "dual function," the military is given
- special civic rights and responsibilities, including unelected
- military seats in Parliament (DPR) and local legislatures, in
- addition to its defense and security roles. The 450,000-member
- armed forces, including 175,000 police, consider the
- maintenance of internal security as their primary mission, and
- they have traditionally acted swiftly to suppress perceived
- threats to security, whether from criminal acts, separatist
- movements, or allegedly subversive activities, with a vigor
- that has often led to human rights abuses. A few military
- leaders sometimes raised questions about the validity of this
- "security approach." There continued to be numerous, credible
- reports of human rights abuses by the military and police,
- although they exhibited some restraint in controlling crowds
- and demonstrations.
-
- In contrast to its restrictive political system, Indonesia has
- an increasingly open and deregulated economy. Though still a
- poor country, Indonesia's economy continued to expand in 1994,
- especially in manufacturing, with gross domestic product
- expected to increase by 6.7 percent. With inflation remaining
- under control, the continued economic growth has produced
- steady gains in living standards for much of Indonesian
- society. The number of people living below the poverty line
- has fallen from 70 million in 1970 to 27 million in 1990.
- Income inequality has been slightly reduced over the past
- quarter century. Widespread unemployment persists, however, as
- do corruption and influence peddling.
-
- The Government continued to commit serious human rights abuses
- and in some areas, notably freedom of expression, it became
- markedly more repressive, departing from a long-term trend
- towards greater openness. The most serious abuses included the
- continuing inability of the people to change their government
- and harsh repression of East Timorese dissidents. Reports of
- extrajudicial killings declined. Security forces continued to
- torture those in custody: some sources reported that the use
- of torture declined, but definitive statistics are not
- available. Extrajudicial arrests and detentions continued, as
- did the use of excessive violence in dealing with suspected
- criminals or perceived troublemakers.
-
- The Government imposed severe limitations on freedoms of
- speech, press, and assembly, and suppressed efforts to develop
- a free trade union movement. The armed forces continued to be
- responsible for the most serious human rights abuses. Some
- military leaders showed a willingness to admit misconduct
- publicly and take action against offenders. The Government in
- a few cases brought abusers to justice, but their punishment
- rarely matched the severity of the abuse. The judiciary
- continued to be largely subservient to the executive branch and
- the military. Widespread corruption in the legal system
- remained a serious problem.
-
- The Government withdrew the licenses of three leading
- publications. It prepared but has not issued a draft
- presidential decree that would restrict further the activities
- of nongovernmental organizations (NGO's), and it increasingly
- cracked down on antigovernmental critics, labor activists, and
- alleged criminals during the year, including in an anticrime
- campaign dubbed "Operation Cleanup" by the Government. These
- constraints, however, did not completely dampen dissenting
- voices in the media, and the many human rights NGO's continued
- to be active. The government-appointed National Human Rights
- Commission established in 1993 showed some independence and a
- willingness to criticize government policies and actions.
-
- On East Timor, no progress was made in accounting for the
- missing persons following the 1991 Dili incident, and troop
- levels remained unjustifiably high. Somewhat greater access
- was permitted to foreign journalists and others, including a
- July visit by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Summary,
- Arbitrary and Extra-judicial Executions, although some NGO
- representatives and foreign journalists continued to encounter
- difficulties or were denied access to East Timor.
-
- RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
-
- Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including
- Freedom from:
-
- a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killings
-
- Historically, politically motivated extrajudicial killings
- generally have occurred most frequently in areas where
- separatist movements were active, such as East Timor, Aceh, and
- Irian Jaya. Although security forces continue to employ harsh
- measures against separatist movements in these three areas,
- there were no confirmed reports of politically motivated
- extrajudicial killings in 1994.
-
- However, there were reports of security forces killing armed
- insurgents including six Aceh Merdeka supporters in clashes in
- Aceh. At least four members of the security forces were also
- reported killed in these clashes. Reliable civilian sources
- reported that in East Timor security forces killed several
- Timorese civilians. The number of such reports was lower than
- in previous years, however. There were no reports of such
- killings in Irian Jaya.
-
- Troop strength in East Timor declined in 1994. Reliable
- estimates indicated that about 6,000 army troops from outside
- the province reinforced the normal garrison of about 3,000.
- There are also about 3,000 police in East Timor. Commanders
- there have stated that they intend to review the level of
- troops in the province for possible further reductions on a
- twice yearly basis. The Government offered a general amnesty
- to members of the Timorese resistance who surrender their arms,
- and it was reported to have released some who were apprehended
- rather than trying them.
-
- The police often employ excessive force in apprehending
- suspects or coping with alleged criminals. In Jakarta police
- in April mounted an anticrime program dubbed "Operation
- Cleanup," in which they employed deadly force against
- suspects. In response to protests that the methods used are
- unjustifiably harsh and amount to execution without trial,
- police have generally claimed that the suspects were fleeing,
- resisting arrest, or threatening the police. Although accurate
- statistics were unavailable, the number of fatal shootings by
- police seemed to be increasing, with some 150 incidents
- reported in West Java (including Jakarta) by mid-July. Human
- rights groups were particularly concerned that this cleanup
- campaign was intensified in the weeks leading up to the
- Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC) meeting in
- November. In North Sumatra, 80 shootings by police, including
- 4 deaths, were reported by mid-December.
-
- In the past the authorities almost never took action against
- police for using excessive force. However, there is some
- indication that the situation is improving, although action
- taken by the authorities is still not commensurate with the
- gravity of police abuses. For example, a military court in
- Medan sentenced a policeman accused of killing a suspect in
- 1993, who was allegedly trying to escape, to 3 months in prison
- in 1994. In March a military court sentenced four policemen in
- Palembang to prison terms of 2 to 3 months for shooting, but
- not killing, a suspect at close range. The five police
- officers detained in 1993 in North Sumatra in connection with
- the death of Syamsul Bahri were not tried, apparently because
- the family did not pursue the case. At least one of the 10
- police cadets accused of beating a man to death in Kupang in
- April was sentenced to 2 years in prison. At year's end the
- military claimed to be still investigating the September 1993
- killings by security forces of four demonstrators who were
- peacefully protesting construction of a dam in Madura; some two
- dozen police and military personnel are involved. Residents
- from the area met with representatives of the National Human
- Rights Commission in May and December to request legal action
- against civilians and military personnel accused of involvement
- in the shootings.
-
- b. Disappearance
-
- There were no politically motivated abductions. Security
- forces in areas of conflict often hold suspects for long
- periods without formal charges, but these cases usually end
- with official acknowledgement of detention (see Section l.d.).
- Reliable sources report that all those alleged to have
- disappeared during the mid-July disturbances at the University
- of East Timor have been located.
-
- Government efforts to account for the missing and dead from the
- November 12, 1991 military shooting of civilians in Dili, East
- Timor, remained inadequate. No additional cases of those still
- listed as missing in a report the military gave to Human Rights
- Watch/Asia were resolved during the year. Government spokesmen
- implied that their failure to locate those missing was
- primarily due to those persons wishing to evade detection.
- Many knowledgeable observers, however, continued to believe
- that most of the missing are dead and that some members of the
- armed forces know where their bodies are located.
-
- c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading
- Treatment or Punishment
-
- The Criminal Code makes it a crime punishable by up to 4 years
- in prison for any official to use violence or force to elicit a
- confession, and it establishes pretrial procedures to give
- suspects or their families the right to challenge the legality
- of an arrest or detention. In practice, security forces
- continued to employ torture and other forms of mistreatment,
- particularly in regions of security concerns such as Aceh and
- East Timor, although some sources reported that the use of
- torture declined. Legal protections are both inadequate and
- widely ignored. According to the January, 1994 report of the
- Special Rapporteur on Torture to the United Nations Human
- Rights Commission, the most commonly used methods are: beating
- on the head, shins, and torso with fists, lengths of wood, iron
- bars, bottles, rocks, and electric cables; kicking with heavy
- boots; burning with lighted cigarettes; electric shocks;
- slashing with razor blades and knives; death threats, faked
- executions and deliberate wounding with firearms; pouring water
- through the nose; prolonged immersion in fetid water; hanging
- upside down by the feet; placing heavy objects on knees and
- other joints; isolation; sleep and food deprivation and genital
- mutilation, sexual molestation, and rape. Civilian sources in
- East Timor report that security agencies still employ torture
- before releasing suspects to police custody, particularly
- electric shocks, though its incidence has decreased.
-
- Police often resort to physical abuses even in minor incidents,
- and prison conditions are harsh, with violence among prisoners
- and mistreatment and extortion of inmates by guards reportedly
- common. The incidence of mistreatment by prison officials
- drops sharply once a prisoner has been transferred from police
- or military custody into the civilian prison system, and prison
- conditions generally have improved in recent years. Officials
- have publicly condemned police brutality and harsh prison
- conditions and occasionally instigate disciplinary action,
- including transfer, dismissal, and trials leading to prison.
- In August a civilian employed at a Medan jail was tried on
- charges of causing the death of an inmate who died from
- injuries sustained in a beating. He was sentenced to 6 months
- in jail. Such actions, however, are an exception to the rule
- of general impunity.
-
- Political prisoners are usually mixed with the general prison
- population, although in the Cipinang prison in Jakarta
- high-profile political prisoners are segregated. In 1994 the
- Government allowed the International Committee of the Red Cross
- (ICRC) to visit prisoners in Cipinang in Jakarta and also
- granted access to prisons elsewhere in Java, Sumatra, Aceh, and
- other provinces as well as EasT Timor. The Government also has
- allowed the ICRC to organize family visits to political
- prisoners. In January the authorities suspended visitation
- rights for jailed East Timorese Fretilin leader Xanana Gusmao
- for 1 month following release of a letter he sent to the
- International Commission of Jurists which Indonesian
- authorities deemed objectionable.
-
- d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
-
- The Criminal Procedures Code contains provisions against
- arbitrary arrest and detention which are routinely violated.
- The Code specifies the right of prisoners to notify their
- families, and that warrants must be produced during an arrest
- except under specified conditions, such as when a suspect is
- caught in the act of committing a crime. It also authorizes
- investigators to issue warrants to assist in their
- investigations or if sufficient evidence exists that a crime
- has been committed. Despite these requirements, authorities
- sometimes make arrests without warrants. Some persons
- suspected of involvement in the Medan riots in April were
- arrested before formal warrants were issued.
-
- The law presumes defendants innocent and permits bail. They or
- their families may also challenge the legality of their arrest
- and detention in a pretrial hearing and may sue for
- compensation if wrongfully detained. However, it is virtually
- impossible for detainees to invoke this procedure, let alone
- receive compensation, after being released without charge. In
- both military and civilian courts, appeals based on legality of
- arrest and detention are rarely, if ever, accepted. The Code
- also contains specific limits on periods of pretrial detention
- and specifies when the courts must get involved to approve
- extensions, usually after 60 days.
-
- In areas where active guerrilla movements exist, such as East
- Timor and Aceh, people are routinely detained without warrants,
- charges, or court proceedings. Bail is rarely granted,
- especially in political cases. The authorities frequently
- prevent access to defense counsel and make it difficult or
- impossible for detainees to get legal assistance from voluntary
- legal defense organizations. The authorities routinely approve
- extensions of periods of detention. In addition, suspects
- charged under the 1963 Antisubversion Law are subject to
- special procedures outside the Criminal Procedures Code which
- allow, for example, the Attorney General the authority to hold
- a suspect up to 1 year before trial. He may renew this 1-year
- period without limit. Special laws on corruption, economic
- crimes, and narcotics are similarly exempt from the Code's
- protections.
-
- The Agency for Coordination of Assistance for the Consolidation
- of National Security (BAKORSTANAS) operates outside the Code
- and has wide discretion to detain and interrogate persons
- thought to threaten national security. It is impossible to
- state the exact number of arbitrary arrests or detentions
- without trial but in March 59 people being held in connection
- with the 1989-91 Aceh insurgency were released without charges
- or trials, bringing the total number released since 1990 to
- around 965 persons. Many had been held incommunicado without
- knowing the charges against them; some, including at least five
- of those released in 1994, had been held for over 2 years. The
- authorities require many of those released to report back at
- regular intervals. Three other Acehnese convicted previously
- of subversion were released in 1994 after serving two-thirds of
- their sentences. The decline in armed separatist activity led
- to fewer detentions, and fewer than 100 Acehnese were believed
- to be in detention without trial at year's end. An additional
- five persons were sentenced for subversion in Aceh in 1994, and
- the trials of five others on charges of subversion and
- narcotics smuggling were scheduled to begin in mid-December.
-
- In East Timor military authorities continued the practice of
- detaining people without charges for short periods and then
- requiring them to report daily or weekly to police after their
- release. Three East Timorese students detained by police in
- August for bringing forbidden books and foreign items into the
- province were released, but two of them are required to report
- to the authorities. Six East Timorese who received lengthy
- sentences in connection with the November 1991 shootings in
- Dili were transferred to the maximum security prison in
- Semarang without prior notice to their families or humanitarian
- organizations, and their whereabouts were unknown for several
- days. Jose Antonio Neves, an acknowledged member of the
- clandestine proindependence movement, and in detention since
- May, was charged with sedition in September. His defense
- attorney asked for dismissal of the charges, citing procedural
- flaws in Neves' arrest. They also allege that police denied
- him access to legal representation for the first 2 months of
- his detention. Around 100 people were arrested during
- demonstrations and outbreaks of violence in Dili around the
- time of the November APEC meetings. Some remained in custody
- at year's end.
-
- e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
-
- The Constitution stipulates the independence of the judiciary,
- but in practice the judiciary is subordinated to the executive
- and the military, and in many cases procedural protections,
- including those against coerced confessions, are inadequate to
- ensure a fair trial. A quadripartite judiciary of general,
- religious, military, and administrative courts exists below the
- Supreme Court. The right of appeal from district court to high
- court to Supreme Court exists in all four systems of justice.
- The Supreme Court does not consider factual aspects of a case,
- only the lower courts' application of law. A three-judge panel
- conducts trials at the district court level, poses questions,
- hears evidence, decides guilt or innocence, and assesses
- punishment. Initial judgments are rarely reversed in the
- appeals process, although sentences are sometimes increased or
- reduced (both the defense and the prosecution may appeal). In
- 1994 for example, the 4-year sentence of a student tried in
- Jakarta for insulting the President in leaflets he distributed
- near the Parliament in November 1993 was increased to 5 years
- upon appeal of the prosecutor. The relatively light (6 months)
- sentences of 21 other students who were also convicted of
- insulting the President during demonstrations at Parliament in
- December 1993 were increased to between 8 and 14 months
- following appeal by the prosecutor. In August the Supreme
- Court ordered the release of those among the 21 students whose
- sentences had been raised to 8 months when they were still
- being held a week following completion of their sentences.
-
- Defendants have the right to confront witnesses and to produce
- witnesses in their defense. An exception is allowed in cases
- in which distance or expense is deemed excessive for
- transporting witnesses to court. In such cases, sworn
- affidavits may be introduced. However, the Criminal Procedures
- Code does not provide for witnesses' immunity or for compulsory
- process of defense witnesses. As a result, witnesses are
- sometimes too afraid of retribution to testify against the
- authorities.
-
- In cases tried under the 1963 Antisubversion Law, trials in
- absentia are permitted and public access generally requires
- advance approval by the military. The courts commonly allow
- forced confessions and limit the presentation of defense
- evidence. For example, the court trying the suspects in the
- Marsinah murder admitted their confessions into evidence and
- convicted them of the murder, even though the defendants
- claimed that their confessions had been obtained by coercion
- and torture. The court allowed defense attorneys for the
- student mentioned above whose sentence was raised to 5 years on
- appeal, to call only one out of 17 witnesses they wished to
- present. Mochtar Pakpahan was not allowed to call expert legal
- witnesses in his defense (see Section 6). Defendants do not
- have the right to remain silent and can be compelled to testify
- in their own trials.
-
- The Criminal Procedures Code gives defendants the right to an
- attorney from the moment of their arrest through the
- investigation and trial. The law requires that a lawyer must
- be appointed in capital cases and those involving a prison
- sentence of 15 years or more. In cases involving potential
- sentences of 5 years or more, a lawyer must be appointed if the
- defendant desires an attorney and is indigent. In theory
- destitute defendants may obtain private legal help, such as
- that provided by the Legal Aid Institute. In practice,
- however, defendants are often persuaded not to hire an
- attorney, or access to an attorney of their choice is impeded.
- The authorities reportedly pressured several defendants tried
- in Medan on charges stemming from labor unrest in April, which
- turned into anti-Chinese riots, to decline attorneys, while
- some attorneys involved in the cases were subjected to official
- harassment of various kinds. Five East Timorese sentenced to
- 20 months imprisonment for publicly expressing anti-Indonesian
- sentiments during a banner-waving incident in the presence of
- foreign journalists were not represented by counsel.
- Authorities claim they declined the right to counsel, while
- nongovernmental sources indicated access to counsel was
- impeded, and that the defense lawyers were not notified in
- advance of their appearance in court that sentencing was to
- begin.
-
- The Supreme Court theoretically stands coequal with the
- executive and legislative branches, but it does not have the
- right of judicial review over laws passed by Parliament. The
- Supreme Court has not yet exercised its power (held since 1985)
- to review ministerial decrees and regulations. In 1993 Chief
- Justice Purwoto Gandasubrata laid out judicial procedures for
- limited judicial review, and some cases of this kind were
- initiated in 1994. Judges are civil servants employed by the
- executive branch, which controls their assignments, pay, and
- promotion. They are subject to considerable pressure from
- military and other governmental authorities. Such control
- often determines the outcome of a case. Corruption permeates
- the legal system. In civil and criminal cases, the payment of
- bribes can influence prosecution, conviction, and sentencing.
- To address this problem, the Government announced that the
- salaries of judges would be doubled as of January 1, 1995.
-
- The Supreme Court bowed to government pressure in a
- longstanding land dispute between the central Java government
- and 34 farmers who had been forced to sell their land for the
- construction of the Kedungombo dam, a development project
- funded by the World Bank. The villagers sued for increased
- compensation. The Supreme Court initially overturned decisions
- of both the Semarang district court and the central Java high
- court in favor of the Government, awarding the plaintiffs even
- greater compensation than they had sought, including
- "nonmaterial losses." However, the Supreme Court later
- reversed its own ruling after the Government refused to accept
- it and asked the Court to review it again.
-
- In an unusual move in November, the East Java High Court
- overturned the conviction of the reputed mastermind of the
- Marsinah murder for insufficient evidence. The Government has
- appealed the decision to the Supreme Court despite provisions
- of the Criminal Code which disallow an appeal in such
- circumstances.
-
- For the fourth consecutive year, there was a decline in the
- number of persons prosecuted under the 1963 Antisubversion Law,
- which carries a maximum penalty of death. The authorities
- tried at least five persons in 1994 under the Law for
- subversion in Aceh and sentenced them to from 19 to 20 years'
- imprisonment. The Antisubversion Law makes it a crime to
- engage in acts that could distort, undermine, or deviate from
- the state ideology or broad outlines of state policy, or which
- could disseminate feelings of hostility or arouse hostility,
- disturbances, or anxiety among the population. The excessively
- vague language makes it possible to prosecute people merely for
- peaceful expression of views contrary to those of the
- Government.
-
- The Government does not make available statistics on the number
- of people currently serving subversion sentences or sentences
- classified as felonies under the so-called Hate-Sowing or
- Sedition laws. Informed sources estimate the number of people
- serving sentences for subversion in 1994, including members of
- the banned Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), Muslim
- militants, and those convicted of subversion in Irian Jaya,
- Aceh, and East Timor, at around 300. Scores, and possibly
- hundreds, more were believed to be serving sentences under the
- Hate-Sowing or Sedition laws. Some of these persons advocated
- or employed violence, but many are political prisoners who were
- convicted for attempting to exercise such universally
- recognized human rights as freedom of speech or association or
- who were convicted in manifestly unfair trials. Six prisoners
- convicted of subversion remained under death sentence. Five of
- these were associated with the Indonesian Communist party, are
- 78 or more years old, and have been imprisoned for 29 years.
- In June two students convicted of subversion in 1993 for
- possessing banned literature and participating in illegal
- discussion groups were granted conditional release after
- serving two-thirds of their sentences. Three alleged members
- of Aceh Merdeka convicted of subversion were released after
- serving lengthy sentences.
-
- f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or
- Correspondence
-
- Judicial warrants for searches are required except for cases
- involving suspected subversion, economic crimes, and
- corruption. However, security agencies regularly make forced
- or surreptitious entries. They also intimidate by surveillance
- of persons and residences and selective monitoring of local and
- international telephone calls without legal restraint.
- Government security officials monitor the movements and
- activities of former members of the PKI and its front
- organizations, especially persons the Government believes were
- involved in the abortive 1965 Communist-backed coup. The
- Government stated in late 1990 that this latter group then
- totaled 1,410,333 people. These persons and their relatives
- sometimes are subject to surveillance, required check-ins,
- periodic indoctrination, and restrictions on travel outside
- their city of residence. Their legally required identification
- cards carry the initials "E.T." which stand for "Ex-Tapol," or
- former political prisoner, which readily identifies them to
- prospective employers or government officials.
-
- The Government's transmigration program which moved large
- numbers of people from overpopulated islands to more isolated
- and backward ones has been criticized by nongovernmental human
- rights monitors. They say that it not only violates the rights
- of indigenous people but also those of the transmigrants,
- claiming that they are frequently duped into leaving their home
- villages without any means of return (see Section 5.).
-
-