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Indonesian editor jailed under repressive libel laws
By John Roberts
6 October 2004
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In a case that has serious implications for democratic rights
in Indonesia, the Central Jakarta District Court sentenced Bambang
Harymurti, editor of the weekly newsmagazine Tempo, on
September 16 to one years jail for defaming a well-known
business tycoon. The alleged victim was Tomy Winata, who has business
interests in banking and real estate and is widely known to be
well connected to countrys political elite as well as having
friends in the police and military.
The criminal case arose out of an article published in Tempo
in early March 2003 that had also been the subject of an earlier
civil defamation action. The state prosecutors adopted a similar
position to that of Winata. The article, they claimed,
implied that Winata had gained financially from, and may have
been responsible for, a fire in February 2003 that destroyed hundreds
of kiosks at the Tanah Abang textile market in Central Jakarta.
The magazine cited a source as saying that in December 2002
Winata had proposed a multi-million redevelopment of the area
to the city administration. The prosecutors alleged that the article
violated sections of the Indonesian Criminal Code against defamation
and a 1946 law prohibiting the publication of a report that could
provoke public disorder. They called for a two-year jail sentence.
Two journalists, Ahmad Taufik and Iskandar Ali Thamrin, were
tried with Harymurti but were acquitted. Harymurti is free pending
an appeal.
The severe sentence was imposed despite the Jakarta High Court
having overturned earlier civil rulings in favour of Winata against
Tempo. The jail term was even more surprising given the
article in question contained a denial by Winata of any involvement
in the planned redevelopment and a denial by the city authorities
that any development had been approved. Indonesian law makes prosecution
difficult if the person allegedly defamed has been given a chance
to deny the allegations.
During the trial, Winata claimed he had not spoken to Tempo
to make the denial. But the defence presented a tape
recording of a Tempo journalist interviewing Winata, three
witnesses who were present during the phone interview, an expert
witness who testified that the voice on the tape was Winatas
and PT Telkom records showing a call to Winatas mobile phone
when the conversation was said to have taken place.
The defence called for the trial to be suspended to allow for
the prosecution of Winata for perjurya procedure that is
allowed under Indonesias court rules. But the court simply
brushed the motion aside, telling the defence to take their perjury
charges to the police.
Speaking to journalists after the trial, prosecutor Robert
Tacoi belittled evidence that Winata lied in court, saying: Indeed
the voice on the cassette resembled Tomys voice, but it
is insignificant. The expert witnesses... did not directly witness
the occurrence of the interview with their own eyes. They only
analysed it... Regardless of the witnesses information,
Tomy Winata said he was never interviewed in connection with the
article.
The prosecution justified the public disorder charge by saying
that the article could have led to Winata being threatened by
Tanah Abang residents or sparked unrest among employees of his
Artha Graha business organisation.
In fact, the only violence occurred in March 2003 when a gang
of about 200 people claiming to be Winatas supporters attacked
the Tempo offices and assaulted staff. The thugs talked
Harymurti into going to the Central Jakarta police station to
resolve the matter. He was assaulted there, as police stood by
and watched, and, was only saved by journalists who rushed to
his aid.
One of the gang was eventually charged for the assault but
was acquitted. Winata escaped prosecution by denying that the
thugs had acted with his knowledge. According to the Laksamana.net
report, however, he later admitted that a senior police officer
had phoned him at the time of the assault to ask permission to
take action against the attackers.
The case has sparked protests from journalist and human rights
groups, in Indonesia and internationally. The Paris-based Reporters
Without Borders website listed 32 press organisations from Indonesia,
Asia, North America and Europe that condemned Harymurtis
conviction and sentence.
Their statement declared the sentence was a breach of
the right to freedom of expression... [which] if not reversed,
will undoubtedly have a severe chilling effect on freedom of expression
in Indonesia. It called for the removal of criminal sanctions
in defamation matters.
Amnesty International expressed concern that the imposition
of criminal sanctions and excessive fines may lead to much greater
caution and self-censorship from the media in their reports about
influential figures which will, in turn, negatively impact upon
the publics right to know and the facilitation of open debate
on issues of public interest.
During the Suharto dictatorship the same laws were used to
muzzle critics of the regime and its business allies. One of the
most sensitive subjects was any reportage of the massive looting
of the national economy by the Suharto family and its close cronies
in business and the military.
After the fall of the Suharto dictatorship in May 1998, a degree
of press freedom opened up. Confronted with a mass movement of
students, workers and others, the military and state apparatus,
including the police and courts, were compelled to pay lip service
to democratic rights. But the so-called reformerssuch as
Megawati Sukarnoputriensured that no fundamental reforms
took place. Indeed, under her presidency, attacks on basic press
freedoms have intensified.
The military has imposed an effective media blackout on its
huge counter-insurgency operation launched in May 2003 to suppress
separatists in province of Aceh. Last November the US-based Human
Right Watch issued a report entitled Aceh under Martial
Law: Muzzling the Messengers: Attacks and Restrictions on the
Media that detailed the methods, including outright thuggery,
used by stifle any serious coverage of the militarys brutal
operations.
In June, the Indonesian government expelled two staff members
of the Brussels-based International Crisis Group (ICG). The ICG
had issued critical reports on military repression in Aceh and
Papua. A prominent role in this expulsion was played by National
Intelligence Agency (BIN) chief Ahmad Hendropriyono. He told the
Indonesian media at the time that up to 20 non-government organisations
were under surveillance for damaging the countrys reputation.
He pointedly warned that a return to the old measures
might be necessary to deal with unwanted criticisms.
The conviction and jailing of Harymurti is meant to reinforce
the warning to the media as a whole. With the installation of
retired general Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono as president later this
month, the military and state apparatus will feel even less restraint
as it seeks to muzzle any, even limited, media exposure of the
activities of the countrys ruling elites.
See Also:
Ex-general wins Indonesian
presidential election
[28 September 2004]
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