Antara, Thursday, February 14, 2008

Freedom at the cross-road
Indonesian Media since Soeharto

By Damian McIver


Jakarta (ANTARA News) - At any given time in Jakarta, wherever you find a 
traffic jam, you 
can find the "tukang koran" - the men who have effectively become walking 
newsstands. 
They weave between the cars and the diesel fumes displaying their goods - 
respectable 
newspapers jostling with racy tabloids, religious iconography competing with 
the lurid 
promise of Playboy. 

In this, the tenth year since Soeharto`s downfall and the restoration of 
democracy, the 
car-window distribution of the "tukang koran" offers a small but revealing 
glimpse into the 
character of the Indonesian media and the changes that have occurred within the 
last 
decade. 

"Compared to ten years ago, it`s 100 per cent different. In terms of the law, 
in terms of 
treatment from the government and in terms of readers and viewers," said Erich 
Thohir, 
owner of media corporation Mahaka Media and president director of its flagship 
Muslim 
newspaper, Republika. 

Under the Soeharto regime, the media in Indonesia was tightly controlled. 
Stories abound 
of journalists being intimidated, jailed or even killed for contradicting the 
official line. 
Meanwhile, a climate of censorship and corruption flourished. 

According to Endy Bayuni, editor of The Jakarta Post, Indonesia`s major English 
language 
newspaper, the ten years since "reformasi" have witnessed significant change. 

"We have come a long way from the Soeharto regime. We were getting phone calls 
almost 
every other night from some general or some minister telling us that certain 
stories could 
not be published for security reasons. [Now] there are no more briefings by top 
military 
about things that we can or cannot publish," he said. 

Thohir agrees with those who proudly claim that Indonesia has the freest media 
in 
Southeast Asia. Indeed, in a region that remains partial to strict media 
controls, the 
diversity and relative open-ness of the Indonesian media is striking. 

A 2007 report on the Indonesian media by Indonesian journalist Toeti Kakiailatu 
says there 
are now over 800 newspapers in circulation throughout Indonesia - nearly four 
times the 
number that existed under Soeharto. While estimates vary, growth in other forms 
of media 
has been equally impressive. 

Speaking at a National Press Day function in Semarang, Central Java, recently, 
President 
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono confirmed his government`s commitment to a free media. 

"There should be no doubt that our choice will always be freedom of the press 
that is 
useful, responsible and adheres to good moral values," he said. 

This government rhetoric and the diversity of media that can be sampled at any 
train 
station, newsagent or traffic jam invite optimism about Indonesia`s political 
future. After 
all, a free press is widely held to be a cornerstone of democracy. However, 
like so much 
else in this nation of beguiling complexity, things are not always what they 
seem. 

International press freedom watchdogs such as Freedom House and Reporters 
Without 
Borders continue to voice concerns about the state of press freedom in 
Indonesia. 
Freedom House`s annual report ranked Indonesia 114 out of 195 countries for 
press 
freedom. 

Two journalists are currently serving prison time in Indonesia for defamation. 
This offence, 
dealt with by press councils or civil courts in most countries, can be legally 
treated as a 
criminal offence here. 

Meanwhile the media power vacuum that emerged post-Soeharto has become an 
intense 
forum of competition between rival business interests. Some of these interests 
have 
proved somewhat hostile to the principles of a free and open media. According 
to Bayuni, 
threats and intimidation continue to be a fact of life for many journalists. 

"What has changed now is that the enemies of press freedom are no longer coming 
from 
the government but they are coming from individual politicians, individual 
businessmen or 
powerful political groups who are not happy about the way they are being 
portrayed in the 
media," he said. 

The Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI) in Indonesia recorded 75 cases of 
violence 
against the press in 2007. This was an increase from 53 the previous year. As a 
witness 
and target of threats and intimidation, Bayuni described how entire media 
offices are 
sometimes targeted. 

"Usually the attacks are conducted by a group of thugs - they come in busloads 
and they 
are organized by businessmen or political organizations that are not happy 
about the way 
they are portrayed in the media," he said. 

This situation is exacerbated by the lack of legal protection, said Bayuni. 

"When we`re subjected to harassment or intimidation and we turn to the police, 
the police 
do nothing about it," he said. 


Struggle for genuine pree freedom

The conflict between the media and big business is not a problem unique to 
Indonesia. 
However, in a democracy that is still young and a culture that still retains 
many links with 
its authoritarian past, the struggle for genuine press freedom in Indonesia 
looms large 
over the country`s future direction. 

Thohir, whose company is one of the major stake-holders within the Indonesian 
media, is 
aware of the threats that business interests can pose. 

"It is a crucial time in Indonesia right now. Most of the media business in 
Indonesia, TV 
especially, is now owned by big businessmen, not by true journalists anymore. I 
cannot 
close my eyes. Many of my colleagues [in other organizations] right now try to 
use the 
media as a business," he said. 

In a further worrying development, there are those who claim that the 
government may 
still be imposing subtle controls on the media.

According to Andreas Harsono, an Indonesian journalist and academic, the 
government 
continues to have undue influence on public service broadcasters such as the 
television 
station TVRI.

"I`m afraid our politicians cannot hold their eagerness to control these public 
broadcast 
organizations. TVRI is a place for politicians to have airtime and positive 
coverage. I`m 
afraid the songs remain the same," he said. 

The Indonesian Press Council is currently drumming up support for its 
opposition to a 
proposed public information bill which, according to the council, would 
discourage 
journalists from disclosing information about public figures. 

A recent report in The Jakarta Post said that articles within the bill would 
allow fines and 
jail time of up to five years to be imposed on anyone found guilty of spreading 
information 
classified as being outside the public domain. 

The uncertainty surrounding what information is classified as outside the 
public domain 
has understandably made journalists in Indonesia quite nervous. The Indonesian 
Government is expecting to pass the bill in March this year. 

Perhaps the most recent example of the convergent tensions between business 
interests, 
government interests and the principles of a free media can be found in the 
coverage of 
the death of former president Soeharto. 

Soeharto`s deteriorating health was the subject of intense media interest in 
Indonesia with 
many outlets undertaking round-the-clock vigils at his hospital in Jakarta. 
Major television 
networks devoted entire schedules to covering his death and funeral. Soeharto 
was 
frequently referred to by the more familiar and reverential `Pak Harto` and 
much of the 
television footage contained nostalgic clips and gushing tributes for the 
former leader. 

According to Eko Maryadi, spokesperson for AJI, this television coverage was a 
betrayal of 
the media`s responsibility to promote and foster public debate. 

"SCTV and TransTV were allowing different voices - they featured former student 
activists 
who were victimized during the Soeharto time to see in a critical way the way 
Soeharto 
became president and things like that. But the rest of the coverage was crap," 
he said. 

Members of the Soeharto family remain major stake-holders within the Indonesian 
media 
and Maryadi believes that their power behind the scenes contributed to the way 
Soeharto`s death was covered. 

"As an Indonesian I felt so ashamed? [that] the press could get so easily 
co-opted. But it 
shows once again that the family of Soeharto is still holding media power in 
Indonesia," 
said Maryadi. 

Maryadi is well qualified to speak about issues of press freedom given the fact 
that he 
spent three years in prison during the Soeharto era. Along with two other 
journalists he 
was imprisoned in 1995 for publishing an unauthorized newspaper. 

Since that time he has campaigned for journalists` rights in Indonesia. He 
acknowledges 
that the task of developing a free and independent press in Indonesia is still 
in its infancy.

"I think we have to be honest to ourselves that our press freedom is very 
young," he said. 

Maryadi, Harsono, Bayuni and Thohir all agree that improving the standard of 
journalism 
education will enable journalists to defend their freedom more rigorously. 

Harsono, who aside from his journalism, runs Pantau, a media training 
organization based 
in Jakarta, Banda Aceh and Ende, argues that progress in the ten years since 
Soeharto`s 
fall has been limited by the lack of a strong journalism culture. 

"How much progress have we made. Not much, because the infrastructure for 
healthy, 
professional journalism is not there yet," he said.

Ironically, it may well be that in the struggle for press freedom, journalists 
themselves may 
end up being their own worst enemies. The problem of ethics looms large over 
media 
debates in Indonesia with many now believing that the media has exploited the 
freedom it 
does have by sensationalising stories, slandering public figures and accepting 
bribes.

"Only 30 per cent of Indonesian media is healthy. The rest is unhealthy which 
means they 
don`t pay their journalists well, they allow journalists to take extra money, 
ask for bribes 
or sometimes become bandits or gangsters. They blackmail people," said Maryadi.

It is something of a paradox that in an environment where many bemoan a lack of 
genuine 
freedom for the press, there are others who believe that the media now has too 
much 
freedom and too much power.

"Is the media too powerful? Yes, but in the future it will balance because of 
the law," said 
Thohir who argues that tightening the laws on the press may be what is required 
to pull 
unethical elements into line.

Only ten years on from Soeharto`s fall and it is clear that there have been 
many positive 
developments within the Indonesian media. The diversity and choice available to 
the 
Indonesian public is testament to that.

However, if one thing is clear, it is that much more work is required for 
genuine freedom 
to be realised in the Indonesian media: freedom from violence and coercion, 
freedom to 
circulate ideas and opinions, and also perhaps, the responsibility of the media 
to use 
whatever freedoms they have in a responsible manner. While deep disagreements 
exist, 
few would argue with the sentiments expressed by Maryadi. 

"It really needs hard work. So much work, so much thought, so much energy - but 
here we 
are, we have to fight for it. Once we struggled for press freedom, once we 
gained it - we 
have to defend it. We have to take responsibility for how this press freedom 
can benefit 
the people, not only journalists. Because press freedom, in the end, must give 
real benefit 
for the people," he said. (*)

COPYRIGHT © 2008


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