Legal
quandaries in tackling IS in Indonesia
Hery Firmansyah and Adam
Fenton ;
Adam Fenton is working on his PhD at Charles
Darwin University; Hery Firmansyah lectures in criminal law
at Gadjah Mada University (UGM) in Yogyakarta
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JAKARTA
POST, 23 Januari 2015
The appearance of a YouTube video directly addressed to
Indonesia’s military commander Gen. Moeldoko has reignited the debate about
the Islamic State (IS) movement in Indonesia. In the four-minute video,
uploaded on Dec. 25 (and subsequently blocked), an Indonesian male, claiming
to speak on behalf of IS, made direct threats against Indonesian security
forces and the integrity of the Indonesian state.
The man, using the name Abu Jandal al Indonesi, addressed
Moeldoko, saying “We have heard that you wish to support coalition forces to
eliminate the caliphate […] and if you do not come to us, we will come to
you.”
Indonesia, a co-sponsor of UN Security Council Resolution
2170, which calls on states to suppress the flow of foreign fighters,
financing and other support to Islamist extremist groups in Iraq and Syria,
has a duty to prevent any kind of support for IS, particularly fighters or
funding, from leaving Indonesia. Following a previous YouTube video called
“Joining the Ranks”, which appeared in August 2014, the government “banned”
IS in Indonesia.
However, while the banning showed a high level of
political will, in the absence of any supporting government or presidential
regulations, the ban amounted to little more than a statement of policy.
Furthermore, it left police in a kind of legal limbo about
what actions they could or could not take against IS supporters. Several IS
supporters, including the self-proclaimed president of IS in Indonesia, Chep
Hermawan, were arrested and subsequently released, as police were unable to
charge them with any offense.
The question of the Indonesian legal approach to IS has
been discussed at the highest levels, as there are no specific laws on the
issue. The most commonly discussed legal option is to revoke the citizenship
of IS supporters. Experts, including the former head of Indonesia’s National
Counter Terrorism Agency, Ansyaad Mbai, have stated that under the
Citizenship Law, those who swear allegiance to a foreign state automatically
forfeit their Indonesian citizenship.
Potentially this law could be applied to individuals, both
those within Indonesia and overseas, who swear allegiance to IS, to
invalidate their Indonesian citizenship.
Applying the Citizenship Law to foreign terrorist fighters
potentially creates both a deterrent effect and a practical solution — those
who have departed Indonesia to join IS will be unable to return. However,
there are significant legal and practical issues that must be considered in
applying this law to foreign terrorist fighters and supporters of IS.
To apply the law, Indonesia would have to implicitly
recognize IS as being, in some form, a foreign state. In taking actions to
weaken IS, the government may, inadvertently, add to the legitimacy of its
claim to statehood.
Further, for the hundreds or even thousands of Indonesians
who have sworn allegiance to IS from within Indonesia, what would be the
practical result of invalidating their citizenship? Would they be made
stateless and required to leave the country? If so, where would they be
“deported” to? It is unlikely that any other country would want to receive
them. And sending them anywhere where they could continue their terrorist
related activities would be a clear violation of UNSC Resolution 2170.
A better solution would be to apply Article 23(d) of the
Citizenship Law, to those who have already departed to Syria and Iraq to join
IS. The article 23 makes no mention of allegiance to a foreign state and
refers only to joining a “foreign military”. Further, for those who remain in
Indonesia, the government’s intelligence services should monitor them closely
and suspend their travel documents when it appears they are at risk of
leaving Indonesia.
The power to suspend passports is among a raft of
anti-terrorism amendments to Australia’s laws. This approach would achieve
the result of both preventing Indonesian foreign terrorist fighters currently
in Syria from returning to Indonesia, and stopping those wishing to join from
leaving the country.
It appears that the war will continue for some time.
Foreign terrorist fighters who participate in a conflict threaten to bring
home their deadly skills and encourage those in their networks to commit
terrorist attacks.
In Indonesia, some groups and individuals have declared
their support for the self-declared caliphate. Indonesia’s most notorious
Islamist inmate, Abu Bakar Ba’asyir, declared his support for IS from his
prison cell on Nusakambangan. Ba’asyir, while imprisoned and elderly, still
has followers numbering in the thousands.
The threat of
renewed IS-inspired attacks on Indonesian soil is therefore real and the
government should take firm action to clarify the legal position and
consequences for those who declare any kind of support for IS. ●
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