Tribunal : A necessity for truth and reconciliation
Fynn-Niklas Franke ; A German journalist, currently living in
Yogyakarta;
A former intern at The Jakarta
Post
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JAKARTA
POST, 01 Oktober 2015
Prior to the Independence Day
celebrations last month, the international European Association for Southeast
Asian Studies (EuroSEAS) conference was held in Vienna, Austria, from of Aug.
11 to 14. The conference brought together 500 scholars and PhD students,
including 130 participants from Asia, with 26 Indonesians participating also.
The event featured heated debate
on relevant research topics related to Southeast Asia. One popular
presentation related to the “International People’s Tribunal for the 1965
crimes against humanity [IPT 1965].”
The presentation was based around
a film program curated by Ascan Breuer, an Austrian filmmaker. After the
screening of his new documentary Riding My Tiger, the audience gained
first-hand information about the IPT 1965 from two of its representatives,
Sri Tunruang and Artien Utrecht.
Alex Floor, chairman of
Germany-based human rights organization Watch Indonesia! moderated the
discussion.
The National Commission on Human
Rights (Komnas HAM) called on the government to establish an ad hoc Human
Rights Court in mid-2012, after the Commission completed a report on their
investigations of human right abuses committed in 1965/1966.
The organizers of the IPT said
they felt that the government has not made serious legal attempts to find a
meaningful solution to the issue. As a result, the IPT foundation was
established in early 2014 and has since been working on the establishment of
an alternative international human rights tribunal.
A group of 12 people in the
Netherlands and 10 in Indonesia are preparing to hold this tribunal at The
Hague, Netherlands, in November this year. Despite criticism over the venue,
and questions as to why it is not being held in Indonesia, the organizers are
determined that it is in the interest of the victims and survivors to hold
the tribunal on an international stage.
The tribunal will be organized
like a human rights court with the regular legal processes and procedures.
“We take our inspiration and lessons from over 80 people’s tribunals that
have been held in the past 40 years, since the Russell tribunal, which was
the first one, on Vietnam,” explained Utrecht.
Former peoples’ tribunals include
the Russell Tribunal on Palestine (2010-2012), the Iran Tribunal (2007-2012)
and the Permanent People’s Tribunal on Sri-Lanka (2010-2013), among others.
The tribunal in The Hague will
establish a historical and scientific record that will build upon oral
testimonies and a research reports from 13 provinces in Indonesia. “We are
working together with a pool of 40 Indonesian and foreign researchers,” said
Utrecht. “There is plenty of material, which the tribunal will examine and
apply principals of international law to it.”
The IPT will also consider the
significant amount of research made available by the Komnas HAM report and
other resources as important foundations to build on.
However, the Tribunal will not
determine the legal culpability of individual perpetrators or make legal
findings regarding guilt. Nor will it be able to impose legal sanctions. “It
has no mandate to do that, because it is a people’s tribunal and not a formal
criminal court,” admitted Utrecht.
“Our aim will be to inform the
international community about the 1965 massacres and violence and call upon
the Indonesian state to recognize the crime and to take accountability
towards the victims and survivors over what has happened. The state should
furthermore take legal and policy measures to allow for rehabilitation.”
In fact, reconciliation and
restitution is much needed in Indonesia as many of the victims and their families
continue to suffer discrimination and stigmatization. Sri Tunruang explained
that this can be seen as a result of the “ghost of communism” that still
haunts the minds of many in Indonesia.
This term refers to the sense of
fear created under the New Order administration about the potential revival
of communism, created by using anti-communist propaganda such as the film
Pengkhianatan G30S/PKI (Treachery of the Sept. 30 Movement/Indonesian
Communist Party).
The 50th anniversary of the
killings this year marks 50 years of impunity for the perpetrators of one of
the largest crimes in human history.
It is crucial that at this time, a
deeper historical analysis of these events takes place, both in the interest
of Indonesia and the whole international community.
Unfortunately, reconciliation
matters are still opposed by many factions of society. For example, according
to merdeka.com, Defense Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu said that the government
would not move forward if it always concerned itself with a past that could
not be resolved. “If you hold a grudge, you’ll never move forward, just add
to the complexity of our problems,” he complained.
That probably represents the views
of a large number of the Tribunal’s opponents, who come primarily from the military,
as well as influential Islamic organizations.
Although the government announced
the formation of a Reconciliation Commission in May this year, people engaged
in the 1965 Tribunal are not fully convinced of the government’s commitment
to the process. “We consider it is not possible to have reconciliation
without first establishing the truth,” said Utrecht.
Similar reactions occurred
following rumors of a possible apology from President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo
during his State of the Nation address on Aug. 15. “A ’sorry’ needs a truth,”
wrote Sri Lestari Wahyuningroem for The Jakarta Post, fearing that “without
truth and commitment to justice, it [the apology] would not liberate the
nation from the burden of its past.”
Truth-finding is the basis for reconciliation;
a process that not only takes place among individual victims and
perpetrators, but also between the generations of young and old people.
In a German anthology edited by
Anett Keller related to this history, The Presence of a Mass Murder, Indonesian
historian Budiawan explained that “reconciliation includes the dealing with
lived history and inherited history.” It therefore exceeds the personal
boundaries and becomes a societal phenomenon.
The hope of the IPT 1965 lies in
its contribution to find the truth about what happened in 1965 and its
aftermath, by holding the International People’s Tribunal in November.
Nevertheless, the task remains for
the Indonesian government to recognize the human rights violations, take on
the responsibility to exercise justice, implement a reparations scheme,
provide compensation and issue apologies to all the victims.
This will hopefully ensure a
healing process for the victims and their families. ●
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