A
decade of injustice – time to find Munir’s real killers
Papang Hidayat ; Amnesty
International’s Indonesia researcher
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JAKART
POST, 07 September 2014
Today
marks exactly 10 years since Indonesia lost one of its most courageous and
compassionate voices — Munir Said Thalib.
On
Sept. 7, 2004, Munir, as he was affectionately known, was slipped arsenic
while in transit in Singapore during a trip to Amsterdam, and didn’t make it
through the flight alive. A decade later, we’re still no closer to finding
the masterminds behind his murder.
One
of Indonesia’s most prominent human rights campaigners, Munir took up the
cause of dozens of activists who were subjected to enforced disappearance. He
co-founded two prominent human rights organizations, helped to uncover
evidence of military responsibility for human rights violations in Aceh,
Papua and Timor Leste (formerly East Timor), and made recommendations to the
government on bringing high-ranking officials to justice. In September 1999,
he was appointed to the Commission of Inquiry into Human Rights Violations
(KPP-HAM) in East Timor.
I
was personally lucky enough to work closely with Munir before his tragic death.
I first met him in 1996 when he was a human rights lawyer with the Indonesian
Legal Aid Foundation. I, along with other student activists, met him
frequently at his office in 1998, when we organized many protests against
Soeharto’s government.
Later,
in 2004, he asked me to join his organization, the Commission for Missing
Persons and Victims of Violence (Kontras), where I worked for more than eight
years before moving to Amnesty International. I remember Munir as not only a
very courageous and persistent human rights defender, but also as an
inspiring guru who trained many excellent rights activists in the country.
Many
of us still live by one of his most famous sayings: “What we must fear most
is fear itself, because fear affects our judgment.”
Although
three people have been convicted of Munir’s murder, there are credible
allegations that those responsible for his death at the highest levels have
not been brought to justice. The three convicted were all employees of Garuda
Indonesia, the state airline that Munir used on the day of his murder, but it
is highly unlikely that they acted alone.
Former
National Intelligence Agency (BIN) official Muchdi Purwopranjono faced trial
in 2008, but was acquitted and many activists claim the process was flawed.
Further, the findings of a 2005 independent fact-finding team into the
killing, which was established by the authorities, was disregarded by the
government and has never been published.
Munir’s case cannot be seen in isolation,
but is indicative of the wider culture of impunity surrounding attacks and
harassment of human rights defenders in the country. In Indonesian there’s
even the word, dimunirkan (munirization), which applies when someone has been
killed in mysterious circumstances.
Although
the worst violence of the Soeharto era has subsided, many activists in
Indonesia still live with daily threats, and it is all too rare that those
responsible for the past killings of human rights defenders have been brought
to justice.
While
outgoing President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono showed little political will to
bring Munir’s real killers to justice, president-elect Joko “Jokowi” Widodo
has made lofty promises to make human rights a priority once he takes office
in October.
Unfortunately,
Jokowi got off to an inauspicious start when he appointed Abdullah Mahmud
Hendropriyono, a former BIN head, to his transition team. Hendropriyono was
the head of BIN at the time of Munir’s murder and many human rights groups
believe was involved in Munir’s assassination — though Hendropriyono has
always denied the allegations. Outrage from Munir’s widow at the appointment
forced Jokowi’s camp to reaffirm their commitment to resolving Munir’s case.
When
Jokowi takes office, he has a golden opportunity to send a clear message that
impunity for the killing of human rights defenders will no longer be
tolerated. A first step should be to release the 2005 fact-finding report
into Munir’s killing to establish the truth. Secondly, he should ensure a
new, independent police investigation into the case, so that everyone
responsible — regardless of their official position — are held to account.
Munir
was a unique voice and Indonesia owes him a debt of gratitude for all he has
done for human rights in our country.
On
the 10th anniversary of his death, the least we can do is ensure that his
murder is not forgotten and that the real killers are brought to justice. ●
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