Jakarta/Brussels, 30 August 2012:
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono needs to act more firmly against
institutions and officials that defy national court rulings or his inaction
risks prolonging local conflicts. Read the full report http://www.crisisgroup.org/en/regions/asia/south-east-asia/indonesia/b138-indonesia-defying-the-state.aspx?utm_source=indonesiareport&utm_medium=1&utm_campaign=mremail
Indonesia: Defying the State, the
latest briefing from the International Crisis Group, details how one impact of
the country's decentralisation drive has been the emergence of regional
politicians willing to defy the courts for short-term political gain. Jakarta's
response has been to dither and hope the problem will go away, encouraging more
insubordination.
“Allowing local officials to defy courts sends the message that
the power of the majority in a region can take precedence over institutions of
justice in a way that emboldens mobs and threatens minorities”, says Achmad
Sukarsono, Crisis Group's South East Asia Analyst. “It hurts the prospects of
local conflict resolution and ultimately undermines Indonesia's democracy”.
The briefing examines three cases of local defiance. In West
Kotawaringin, Central Kalimantan, councillors have been defying a
Constitutional Court ruling that disqualified the winner of the district's
election on grounds of vote-buying and gave the defeated incumbent a second
term. The district chief currently cannot govern properly and opponents burned
down his official residence. In Bogor and Bekasi in West Java, local
executives, pandering to conservative Muslims, have denied permits for church
construction although courts had overruled their objections. Tensions flare
whenever Christians hold services at the disputed sites.
In each case, the central government failed to enforce
compliance with court rulings and allowed resistance to escalate, sometimes
violently. When tensions erupted to the point of attracting media attention,
Jakarta sought negotiation and compromise rather than upholding constitutional principles
and judicial authority. But when these efforts failed, the authority of the
president and the courts was weakened.
Jakarta officials argue that relations with regions have
changed. The devolution of powers to districts and cities since 1999 is a
response to the more than 30 years of centralised rule of the late President
Soeharto. The advent of direct local elections in 2005 made local officials
even more independent of the central government.
In the short term, the central government should treat these
cases as obstruction of justice and act accordingly, using a range of legal
measures that are available to the president. In the longer term, it should
develop the concept of contempt of court to strengthen the judicial branch of
government.
“To promote a forceful role for Jakarta on these matters is not
to advocate micro-management of the regions or recentralisation, but rather to
strengthen democracy and ensure that local conflicts are not allowed to
fester”, says Jim Della-Giacoma, Crisis Group's South East Asia Project
Director.
No comments:
Post a Comment