Nusron’s top priority :
Migrant workers on death row
Elly Burhab Faizal ; A journalist at The Jakarta Post currently
attending the MA Journalism Program School at the Loyola Schools of the
Ateneo de Manila University in cooperation with the Konrad Adenauer Asian
Center for Journalism
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JAKATA
POST, 04 Desember 2014
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The new
head of the Agency for the Placement and Protection of Indonesian Migrant
Workers (BNP2TKI), Nusron Wahid, will have quite a handful of challenges
after taking over for Gatot Abdullah Mansyur.
Inaugurated
by President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo last Thursday, Nusron now shoulders the
burden of keeping Jokowi’s promise of prioritizing the protection of migrant
workers, while overcoming criticism that the agency is not doing enough to
tackle the exploitation of our “foreign-exchange heroes”.
Nusron,
leader of the Ansor Youth Movement (GP Ansor), the youth wing of Indonesia’s
largest Muslim organization, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), is a Golkar Party
politician who was removed from his post on a key commission in the House of
Representatives, allegedly for openly endorsing Jokowi and his running mate,
Jusuf Kalla, who is also a senior Golkar politician.
Regarding
Nusron’s appointment, Cabinet Secretary Andi Widjajanto cited his role in
Jokowi’s presidential election campaign in addition to his concern for migrant
workers’ protection. Reports on the exploitation and abuse of migrant workers
were taken seriously by former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who issued
directives in 2011 to better protect their rights.
These included the imposition of a
moratorium on sending workers to Saudi Arabia and the issuance of
Presidential Decree No.17/2011 that established a task force to protect
migrant workers under the threat of the death penalty. Indonesian missions
abroad formed special teams tasked with, among other assignments, regularly
visiting prisons and providing legal assistance to Indonesian nationals
facing legal problems.
The
directives were issued following the case of Ruyati binti Satubi, a
54-year-old migrant worker who in June 2011 was beheaded for allegedly
killing her Saudi employer. The case triggered public anger after the
government said it only found out about the case after the execution.
Critics
maintain that protection measures need to be beefed up to end the
exploitation of Indonesian workers. Anis Hidayah who leads the Migrant Care
NGO said a task force to protect migrant workers from death penalty threats
was only an ad hoc measure.
“This is
also very wasteful because the task force’s main duties — such as identifying
problems of migrant workers facing the death penalty and advocating and
providing legal aid to workers undergoing the legal process or facing the
death penalty — could have been handled by an Indonesian representative
overseas,” she told The Jakarta Post.
Concerns
about the plight of migrant workers were raised by the human rights group,
Amnesty International in September, which urged the government to pressure
the Saudi Arabian government to lighten the sentence handed down to Siti
Zainab binti Duhri Rupa, who is on death row for allegedly stabbing her
employer to death in 1999.
At the
top of Nusron’s to-do list will be addressing death penalty threats currently
facing some 280 migrant workers, despite the government’s efforts to protect
their rights.
Ongoing
reports on discrimination, exploitation and abuse of migrant workers also
highlighted disgraceful practices of recruitment, despite Law No.39/2004 on
the placement of migrant workers and the ratification of the 1990 UN
Convention on the Protection of Migrant Workers and their Families in May
2012.
The
exploitation has persisted even as migrant workers continue to be a boon to
their home countries. Last year, overseas remittances by some 6.5 million
Indonesian migrant workers totaled Rp 88.6 trillion (US$7.26 billion) from
January to December.
The law
itself, said the NGO Solidaritas Perempuan (Women’s Solidarity), was aimed
primarily at regulating the dispatch of migrant workers by placement agencies
rather than establishing a standard mechanism to ensure worker and employer
rights and responsibilities.
Of 108
total articles in the law, only four regulate migrant workers’ protection.
Many critical roles played by the state — such as worker recruitment — are
handed over to private companies. This has allowed scalpers to flourish;
consequently, Indonesian migrant workers are seen as economic commodities
rather than as Indonesian citizens and human beings entitled to state
protection.
In 2004,
the draft revision of the law was included in the 2005 National Legislation
Program (Prolegnas) list. It was included again in the 2009 list, but no
progress was made. Discussions on the draft revision began only after the
government ratified the Convention on Migrant Workers in 2012, during which
Yudhoyono issued a Presidential Mandate appointing several ministries to work
together with their counterparts at the House to discuss the law’s revision —
with no significant progress made.
Despite
efforts by NGOs, the future of the draft revision remains uncertain following
the dissension of the House into two groups — the Red-and-White Coalition and
the other led by the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P). Until
the division is settled, the President has banned Cabinet ministers and
related officials from attending any meetings with House lawmakers.
Without serious efforts to ease the tension, the government will prove
for umpteenth time its reluctance to seriously address the discrimination,
exploitation and abuse of millions of migrant workers. ●
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