Despite various efforts deployed to counter terrorism,
violent radicalization remains a major challenge for Indonesia. The country is
witnessing an unprecedented surge in the number of citizens departing to
foreign countries to fight for terrorist groups. Earlier this year, the
National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT) estimated that at least 500 Indonesians
had left for Iraq and Syria to join the Islamic State (IS) movement. Although
IS is currently the center of attention, the militant organization, Jamaah
Islamiyah, is reportedly regenerating with systematic recruitment and training
agendas.
Many have blamed growing
radicalization on weak law enforcement and the lack of clear regulations to
address hate speech in the country, although obviously this is not the only
factor.Former BNPT chief Ansyaad Mbai has expressed concern about the weak
legal framework. Currently, the only legislation to address hate speech in
Indonesia is Article 156 of the Criminal Code on spreading hate, which
stipulates imprisonment for up to four years for “anyone who publicly expresses
enmity, hatred or insults against one group or some groups of Indonesians”.
However, this article does not
make a clear distinction between valid criticisms and hate speech; and it only
criminalizes narratives against Indonesians. Thus, it does not address the
common rhetoric against Westerners or Shia Muslims in Iraq, a narrative often
used to recruit Indonesian fighters.Several figures and hard-line organizations
are widely known to deliver hate speech in Indonesia.
The cleric, Abu Bakar Ba’asyir, is
known for his sermons in mosques, which boldly stated that “God has divided
humanity into […] the followers of God and those who follow Satan.”He defines
God’s followers as people who follow God’s law and fight for the implementation
of sharia law, and Satan’s followers as those who create obstacles to such
efforts. Ba’asyir also justified the 2002 Bali bombings and labeled Western
tourists as “worms, snakes, maggots; animals that crawl” and encouraged young
Muslims to “beat up” Westerners.
Recently, through Jamaah Ansharut Tauhid (JAT)
chairman Mochammad Achwan, Ba’asyir called upon his followers to support IS.
Former chairman of the Indonesian Mujahedeen Assembly, Irfan S. Awwas, is also
known for such speeches. He stated that people should not have criticized the
executed Bali bombers Imam Samudra and Amrozi, as they committed their actions
based on their individual interpretation and judgment. Recently, local jihadi
groups such as the Hilal Ahmar Society Indonesia (HASI) have also been
preaching on the importance of supporting IS.
The group has been portraying
Shiites as deviants and associating them with Syria’s Assad regime, creating
the impression that Sunni Muslims are victims of Shiite’s evil deeds. Besides
preaching in public space, HASI also uses online media to publish articles and
videos that demonize Shiites and encourages the audience to support IS. The
Islam Defenders Front (FPI), despite their detachment from Salafism, has been
actively proliferating hatred domestically. A video of FPI secretary-general
Sorbi Lubis was widely circulated on the Internet, in which he was recorded as
saying “[K]ill Ahmadiyah wherever they are […] Kill, kill, kill! If we do not
kill Ahmadiyah […] we will not be halal [clean] anymore.”This speech reportedly
contributed to mobilizing people to commit radical, violent actions against the
minority group.
Obviously, an individual’s
ideology will not be affected easily just by listening to hate speech. A
reasonable person may see provocative videos by IS and not likely be persuaded
to join the fight. Geopolitics and personal history play major roles in
defining how an individual responds to hate speech. But those from poor
families, with low education and an anti-Western bias may be more likely to be
persuaded by the provocation. Influential hate speech is usually delivered by
individuals who are considered respectful and charismatic, a la Abu Bakar
Ba’asyir.
Audiences of certain mosques and
boarding schools who are exposed to a constant stream of extreme ideas promoted
by charismatic teachers and surrounded by others who believe likewise will be
more swayed by hate speech. Many HASI members are former students of Ba’asyir’s
Al-Mukmin boarding school.One challenge to addressing hate speech is the
difficulty in defining what constitutes such action. A professor at Yale Law
School, Robert Post, identified two issues to defining hate speech. He posed
the questions; “when do […] otherwise appropriate emotions become so ‘extreme’
as to deserve legal suppression?” and “how do we distinguish hatred from
ordinary dislike or disagreement?”Article 20 (2) of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights stipulates that national law should prohibit any
propaganda that proliferates hatred on the basis of nationality, race or religion
if it constitutes “incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence”.
Arizona State University’s Center for Strategic Communication made a useful
distinction between freedom of speech and religious hate speech by creating a
four-point scale:
(1) dialogue on religious differences;
(2) unilateral condemnation of
others’ belief systems;
(3) dehumanization and
demonization of certain groups with implicit message of violence; and
(4) explicit, provocative message
of violence.
They argue that point (1) and (2)
are considered valid criticism of other belief systems, while (3) and (4) are
considered hate speech, as they encourage violence against certain groups. This
categorization may be useful as a point of departure for the Indonesian
government to differentiate hate speech from other forms of freedom of speech.
Hate speech is not an independent
factor and it does not always result in the “radicalization” of an individual.
However, it can be a strong shaper of one’s ideology and can foment radicalism
when it interplays with other factors. Hate speech strengthens social
categorization in the mind of the individual, bolstering a sense of an “us” and
a “them”. In the authoritarian era of Soeharto, such speech would not have any
room whatsoever.
Today, the Joko “Jokowi” Widodo
administration needs to combat hate speech without harming other forms of
freedom of speech, although some trade-offs may be inevitable. Regulating hate
speech will not automatically reduce exposure to the promotion of violence in
Indonesia, but it will help take one variable out of the equation.
The writer Tiola Javadi, is a student research assistant in the the Indonesia
Program at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang
Technological University, Singapore.
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