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Subject: The past is not forgotten and will never be forgotten
Jakarta Post, 07/07/2009
The past is not forgotten and will never be forgotten
Usman Hamid and Suciwati , Porong, East Java
Listening to the presidential candidates in the last debate, it was
clear that their concerted appeal was that it was time for Indonesia to
move on from the past.
Megawati presented herself as an example of forgiveness, while Jusuf
Kalla and SBY focused more on reconciliation than accountability.
Their commercials show prosperous farmers, educated children and
Indonesians climbing bright green hills. But there are some images you won’t
see in the commercials. In the last few days the Commission for Missing
Persons and Victims of Violence (Kontras) has toured Java with a
remarkable group of people affected by past crimes and has met with local
communities affected by the continuing violation of their rights.
The writer William Faulkner once said that the past is not forgotten,
and, in fact, it is not even the past. For those of us on the Kontras tour
— a daughter whose father disappeared during the 1984 Tanjung Priok
riot, a mother whose son disappeared one day in 1997/1998, another whose
son was killed by sniper fire at a protest, a young mother whose husband
was poisoned on an airline trip abroad — the past is something we live
with everyday.
And so it is for the rest of Indonesia as well, for two reasons. On our
trip, we met communities whose health and livelihood may be threatened by
cement factories and mines, and others made homeless by a disastrous
mudflow.
They are victims of the same fundamental problems as the victims of
past abuses: Weak institutions that cannot protect people’s rights and a
resulting impunity for those responsible for negligence, arbitrary
actions, or even serious crimes. And many future policies such as poverty
reduction, agrarian reform, environmental protection, and economic
development as a whole, are likely to be affected by the same patterns of
abuse and impunity.
There is a second reason that these crimes should be a concern for all
candidates, and for all voters. When people and governments are not held
accountable for their actions, it changes the relationship between
citizens and their leaders. Such a condition creates a climate of fear,
exposes government critics to intimidation, and undermines confidence in
the state to provide justice and protection.
For all these reasons we need leaders willing to address the past head
on. We need policies to strengthen the capacity and independence of the
courts, the Attorney General’s Office, and the National Human Rights
Commission.
We need leaders with the political will to see that justice is done,
through an appropriate combination of prosecutions and extra judicial
mechanisms of truth, reconciliation and redress. These measures must
include military and other institutional reform.
As a non-partisan organization, Kontras does not endorse any candidate.
Unfortunately, this is all too easy, as all three candidates haven’t
shown a clear commitment to justice for past crimes. And as important as
these policies are, the current election is about more than policies.
Even a non-partisan organization cannot ignore the fact that among the
vice-presidential candidates are two men credibly linked to major human
rights abuses.
The fact that they are candidates says as much about Indonesian society
as it does about the individuals or the parties that put them forward as
candidates.
It is unlikely that such figures would be credible candidates for a
national office in a country that had made full and accurate accounting of
the past.
Elections provide citizens with an opportunity to reassert their
aspirations for the future and their relationship with their leaders. It
is where ordinary citizens can hold those in power accountable by awarding
them a vote or choosing not to.
Whatever the outcome of the elections, our elected leaders, including
those in parliament, have a lot of work to do. And so do the rest of us:
if the nation is to move forward, we must address, and learn from, the
past that all Indonesians still live with today.
The writers are members of the Committee of Action and Solidarity for
Munir (KASUM) founded in 2004 in response to the assassination of human
rights activist Munir Said Thalib on Sept. 7, 2004. --
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