http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/01/13/book-banning-indonesia-a-blast-past.html

Book banning in Indonesia: A blast from the past 
John Roosa ,  Vancouver, Canada   |  Wed, 01/13/2010 9:41 AM  |  Opinion 



When I heard the news that the Indonesian translation of my book, Pretext for 
Mass Murder: The September 30th Movement and Soeharto's Coup d'État in 
Indonesia, was banned, I was perplexed. 
What year was it? Was Soeharto still in power? In the midst of the remarkable 
progress in legal reform since Soeharto's fall in 1998, book banning has become 
anachronistic. The Dec. 23 announcement by the Attorney General's Office (AGO) 
is like some antique brought out from a dusty storeroom.   

Indonesian citizens have gained a sense of self-confidence in the face of 
officialdom. University rectors, historians, lawyers, journalists, students, 
among others, have condemned the banning. 

The typical comment today is that the banning insults the intelligence of 
citizens to judge books for themselves. To borrow a phrase from Benedict 
Anderson, who was banned from the country for decades for his writing on the 
Sept. 30 Movement, Indonesia has a new society and an old state. 

As a historian, I am impressed by the long-term continuity of Indonesian laws 
on censorship. The AGO announcement banning my book cites Law no. 4 of 1963 - a 
presidential order (penetapan) of President Sukarno's that harkened back to 
colonial-era laws. 

Its preamble states that it was designed to "safeguard the path of the 
Indonesian Revolution." That was Sukarno's language. Is the AGO today banning 
publications for the sake of "the Indonesian Revolution"? Are we still out to 
crush Malaysia? 

If the AGO is committed to Sukarnoism it should praise my book. However much I 
dislike his authoritarian Guided Democracy, I have great respect for Sukarno's 
intelligence, basic decency, and anti-imperialist foreign policy. 

I think my book works nicely as an elaboration of his all-too-brief, three-fold 
analysis of the Sept. 30 Movement: The cunning of imperial and neo-colonial 
subversion, the foolishness of the PKI leaders, and the presence of many 
individuals who were "not right" (apparently meaning Soeharto and his 
associates). 

My book endorses his simile about the mass violence carried out in the name of 
repressing the Sept. 30 Movement: It was like burning down a house to kill a 
rat.   

The key task of the Reformasi period has been to overcome the legacy of two 
authoritarian polities and create a government based on the rule of law. 

Two outstanding achievements have been President B.J. Habibie's canceling of 
the notorious Anti-Subversion Law of 1963 and the late President Abdurrahman 
Wahid's closing of Bakorstanas, an intelligence body with sweeping, undefined 
powers originating in the emergency of October 1965. 

Reformasi has wounded Law no. 4 of 1963 but has not yet killed it. The laudable 
press law of 1999 eliminated its application to newspapers, magazines, and 
serials, while leaving untouched its application to other printed materials. 

So we have the strange situation now where the AGO is forbidden from censoring 
or banning the press but has been left free to ban books, pamphlets and 
posters. 

The former head of the Constitutional Court, Jimly Asshiddiqie, has stated that 
Law no. 4 is "out of date."

My publisher and I have no idea why my book was banned. Right now we're in 
Kafka-land: Declared guilty without being told what the crime is. 

The AGO's press statement claims that my book "disrupts public order." How it 
does that goes unexplained. So far the AGO hasn't even provided the text of the 
"letter of decision" (Surat Keputusan). 

The AGO spokesperson mentioned that his office had catalogued 143 objectionable 
passages in my book. It would be edifying for me, other scholars of Indonesian 
history, and the general public to see the full report. 

In most democratic polities that allow for the banning of books (in the name of 
suppressing pornography for instance), the banning is usually done through the 
courts. Prosecutors have to publicly explain their case against a publication 
and persuade a judge or jury that it is indeed in violation of the law. 

Authors and publishers present their counter-arguments. The German laws against 
Holocaust denial work in this way; prosecutors there do not unilaterally ban 
books. While I am opposed to any kind of book banning, I will admit that an 
open, transparent procedure in the judiciary is preferable to a secretive, 
arbitrary procedure inside an inscrutable bureaucracy.

Many books have been published in the last ten years that have been critical of 
the Soeharto regime's version of the events of 1965-1966. Except for some 
textbooks in 2007, none have been officially banned. I do not think my book is 
special enough to deserve the AGO Prize. 

My book actually endorses part of the Soeharto regime's version (on the role of 
the PKI's Special Bureau) even while it rejects other parts (such as the claim 
that every PKI member should be held responsible for the Sept. 30 Movement). My 
book is a work of scholarship that brings out new primary sources and 
critically evaluates the fullest possible range of sources. It should be useful 
even to people who disagree with my conclusions.   

Some publishers want their books to be banned so they can use the AGO for free 
advertising. To ensure that no one thinks we will profit from the new interest 
in my book, my publisher and I have decided to withdraw the copyright on it. 

The entire text of the Indonesian translation is available online to be 
downloaded for free. My publisher, the Indonesian Institute of Social History, 
has stated that there should be no barriers to knowledge except 
narrow-mindedness - and I suppose a slow internet connection.

The AGO banning of my book does a disservice to the great advances in legal 
reform that Indonesia has achieved since 1998. It gives the international 
community the wrong impression of the country.

If I were an Indonesian - to modify the title of Ki Hajar Dewantara's famous 
essay banned by the colonial state in 1913 for "disrupting public order" - I 
would believe, along with Ki Hajar, Indonesia's "Father of Education," that the 
nation's progress lies in reading more books, not banning more books, and in 
the self-assurance and free-thinking of its people, not in state-imposed 
intellectual conformity.



The writer is Associate Professor of History at the University of British 
Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.


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