http://www.atimes.com/article/democracy-takes-step-back-indonesia/
Democracy takes a step back in Indonesia Newly enacted law bans public
criticism of politicians after media helped to expose country's most
egregious ever parliamentary scandal

By John McBeth <http://www.atimes.com/writer/john-mcbeth/> Jakarta, March
26, 2018 3:31 PM (UTC+8)


[image: Indonesian journalists wearing masks observe World Press Freedom
Day in Jakarta, Indonesia, May 3, 2016. Photo: AFP Forum]Indonesian
journalists wearing masks observe World Press Freedom Day in Jakarta,
Indonesia, May 3, 2016. Photo: AFP Forum

Twenty years after the fall of president Suharto’s authoritarian regime,
Indonesians are waking up to the fact that new laws which have either been
passed or are under consideration threaten to erode the hard-fought
concepts of freedom of speech and expression.

While Indonesia may have what New York-based Freedom House calls a “vibrant
and diverse media environment,” its most recent 2017 report said press
freedom was still hampered by legal and regulatory restrictions and a
resulting penchant for self-censorship.


In what activists say is a worrying example of democratic back-sliding –
and an apparent dislocation in the law-drafting process – the House of
Representatives recently passed an amendment to the 2014 Legislative
Institutions Law, or MD3, which effectively protects the country’s
politicians from public criticism.

The legislation allows for Parliament’s ethics council to bring charges
against anyone who “disrespects the dignity of the House or its members,”
but does not define what “disrespect” means or say what form of punishment
will be meted out to violators.

Although his ruling Indonesian Democratic Party for Struggle (PDI-P) is
among the eight political parties who supported the revision, President
Joko Widodo has refused to sign it and a coalition of civil society
organizations is challenging it in the Constitutional Court.

Critics say that by denying them the right to criticize their own
representatives, the amended law undermines the sovereignty of the people.
“I understand these concerns,” the president said in a statement last
month. “We all want the quality of our democracy to rise, not fall.”

[image: Indonesian President Joko Widodo delivers a speech at Foreign
Ministry office in Jakarta, Indonesia, February 12, 2018. Antara Foto/Wahyu
Putro/ via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD
PARTY. MANDATORY CREDIT. INDONESIA OUT.]

Indonesian President Joko Widodo delivers a speech at Foreign Ministry
office in Jakarta, February 12, 2018. Antara Foto via Reuters/Wahyu Putro

Baffling to many analysts, however, is why the palace didn’t do more to
head off or at least freeze the process, when the constitution specifically
states that the content of bills must be jointly approved by Parliament and
the president, or his representatives.

If agreement isn’t reached, then the bill can not be considered again by
the same Parliament.

A palace spokesman did not respond to a request for comment, but a senior
government official claims the immunity from criticism provision was
inserted after the president had approved the draft law, which also gave
PDI-P two speakership positions that it had been trying to secure since
winning the 2014 elections.

If that was the case, then it suggests a disturbing failure in the
law-making process itself, with a lack of communication or coordination
between the palace and Justice Minister Yasonna Laoly. In fact, it is
similar to what is now happening with equally controversial proposed
changes to the century-old Criminal Code.

Lacking veto power, Widodo was unable to prevent the amended legislative
bill from automatically becoming law on March 14, 30 days after it slipped
through a plenary session of the House; only the United Development (PPP)
and National Democrat (Nasdem) parties, two members of the ruling
coalition, stood against it.

Civil society activists who know him say that as a long-standing member of
PDI-P, and a former party legislator himself from North Sumatra, the
American-educated Laoly is on difficult ground, evidenced by his public
call for a petition against the law in which he seemed to abrogate his own
responsibility.

Despite being in opposition for much of that time, the PDI-P has had 171
local and national politicians convicted of corruption over the past
decade, well ahead of Golkar (116) and former president Susilo Bambang
Yudhogyono’s Democrat Party (51).

[image: Indonesian parliament speaker Setya Novanto, is escorted from the
Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) building in Jakarta, Indonesia
November 21, 2017. Photo: Antara Foto via Reuters/Wahyu Putro]

Indonesia’s ex-parliament speaker Setya Novanto is escorted from the
Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) building in Jakarta, Indonesia
November 21, 2017. Photo: Antara Foto via Reuters/Wahyu Putro

Ironically, the revision came into force four months to the day since
former House Speaker Setya Novanto went on trial for allegedly engineering
the embezzlement of 2.3 trillion rupiah (US$$$) from a 5.9 trillion rupiah
electronic identity card (e-KTP) project.

Novanto claimed in court testimony last week that two prominent PDI
leaders, Coordinating Minister for Human Development and Culture Puan
Maharani and Cabinet Secretary Pramono Anung, both received US$500,000 from
the grossly front-loaded project.

Maharani is the daughter of PDI-P chairperson Megawati Sukarnoputri.

The scandal has left Parliament a target of public scorn, with the
Anti-Corruption Commission (KPK) implicating nine political parties, along
with 37 lawmakers from the 2009-2014 parliamentary legal commission, none
of whom have been charged so far. Maharani and Anung had not been named
until now.

The legislative law is not the only concern for press freedom advocates.
The draft of the new Criminal Code, currently in the hands of a special
parliamentary committee, prescribes a maximum of nine years’ imprisonment
for anyone who verbally attacks the president or vice president.

[image: A worker pulls down a campaign poster of Indonesia's then
presidential candidate Joko Widodo and his running mate Yusuf Kalla after a
rally in Cirebon, Indonesia, June 18, 2014. Photo: Reuters/Beawiharta]

A worker pulls down a campaign poster of Indonesia’s then presidential
candidate Joko Widodo and his running mate Yusuf Kalla after a rally in
Cirebon, Indonesia, June 18, 2014. Photo: Reuters/Beawiharta

Individuals who publicly defame the two leaders face five years in jail,
though with a rider that their action will not be considered as defamation
“if it is done to serve the public interest or as a measure of
self-defense” – again overbroad language that can be loosely interpreted.

Subsequent articles also prescribe three years’ imprisonment for those who
publicly defame Indonesia’s government in a manner that causes social
unrest, or who broadcast, exhibit or disseminate defamatory anti-government
material

Foreign journalists have little to complain about in the way of official
restrictions, though Widodo’s decision in 2015 to lift the ban on them
travelling to restive Papua has never been properly implemented on the
ground.

Even when permission is given, obstacles remain. Military officials
expelled BBC correspondent Rebecca Henschke and her two Indonesian
assistants from the territory last month while covering a health emergency
on the southeast coast.

Henschke was accused of “hurting the feelings” of soldiers involved in the
relief effort by tweeting that the aid for severely malnourished Asmat
tribal children comprised little more than instant noodles, sugary soft
drinks and biscuits.

[image: Jakarta's governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama (second row (C) with
glasses), known by his nickname Ahok, is asked questions by journalists at
the police headquarters in Jakarta on November 7, 2016.Purnama, the
Indonesian capital's Christian governor, faced a marathon police grilling
on November 7 for allegedly insulting Islam, after the accusations sparked
a violent mass protest by hardliners in the Muslim-majority country. / AFP
PHOTO / Wawan Kurniawan]

Journalists ask questions of Jakarta’s then governor Basuki Purnama at
police headquarters in Jakarta on November 7, 2016. Photo: AFP/ Wawan
Kurniawan

Amnesty International Indonesia’s executive director Usman Hamid called the
expulsion “a clear violation of the right to freedom of expression” and
other critics questioned why only the military — and not the police — were
involved.

Freedom House’s 2018 country report on Indonesia has yet to be released,
but it is likely to take a harsher line than it did in 2017 when Indonesia
was one of the 59 countries designated as “partly free” with a score of
four out of seven for civil liberties.

“Journalists often practice self-censorship to avoid running afoul of civil
and criminal defamation laws,” it said in last year’s report, pointing to
the 2008 Electronic Information and Transaction Law that has been
increasingly used to curb freedom of expression.

Ostensibly, the law is aimed at cracking down on pornography, on-line
fraud, money laundering, gambling and other cyber-crimes, but much of the
focus has instead been on cases of defamation and blasphemy.

Among the more than 200 Internet users prosecuted under the law so far have
been scores of alleged offenders who have been accused of lodging
supposedly baseless corruption complaints against government and other
public officials.

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