AHRC: Open Letter to UNOHCR
Below is an excerpt from the Asian Human Rights Commission's
open letter to the UN, please see the following PDF link for
the full letter and appendixes:
http://img.scoop.co.nz/media/pdfs/0910/Microsoft_Word__WPM33C1.pdf
28
October 2009
An Open Letter to the UN Working Group on
Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances by the Asian Human
Rights Commission
Mr. Jeremy J. Sarkin,
Chairperson
UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary
Disappearances
Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)
Palais des Nations
1211 Geneva 10
SWITZERLAND
Dear Mr. Jeremy J. Sarkin,
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) is seeking
the intervention of the Working Group on Enforced or
Involuntary Disappearances concerning the many
disappearances committed by the State in Indonesia’s past,
concerning which impunity prevails to date. One of the key
events that led to the reformation of the Indonesian state
were protests against Suharto's New Order regime in 1997 and
98. At that time many activists were abducted and
disappeared. For more than 10 years local non-governmental
organisations as well as the National Commission for Human
Rights (Komnas HAM) have urged the government to resolve
these cases and have conducted considerable campaigns to
push for justice without success. President Yudhoyono
promised to make issues of impunity and atrocities that
occurred during the past a top priority for his last
presidential period. President Yudhoyono has recently been
re-elected for a second term and the AHRC fears that no
further progress will be made in these cases wit
Between
1997 and 1998, 23 students and other activists were
reportedly abducted by the Army Special Forces Command
(known as Kopassus) because of their political activism in
the struggle for change and democracy under the New Order
regime.
This movement finally led to the reformation of
the Indonesian state towards a modern democracy. For
Indonesia to become a modern, stable democracy benefiting
from the rule of law and the respect for human rights, it is
vital for justice to be rendered concerning the grave and
widespread abuses of the past. While all of the country’s
many victims of a range of grave and widespread abuses
require justice and reparation, the AHRC believes that in
taking up the emblematic cases of the disappeared students
and activists the Working Group could contribute
significantly to dismantling the current system of impunity
that is affecting these cases. This would then have helpful
repercussions on the problem of disappearances more widely
and the system of impunity concerning oth
The initial
abduction of nine student activists - Pius Lustrilanang,
Desmon J Mahesa, Haryanto Taslam, Mugiyanto, Aan Rusdianto,
Faisol Reza, Rahardja Waluya Jati, Nezar Patria and Andi
Aref - led civil society to demand their release and
accountability on the part of the military that had
perpetrated these disappearances. One by one the victims
were returned, however, 13 people are still missing, namely:
Suyat, Yani Afri, Sonny, M. Yusuf, Noval Alkatiri, Dedy
Hamdun, Ismail, Bimo Petrus, Abdun Naser, Hendra Hambali,
Ucok Siahaan, Yadin Muhidin and Wiji Thukul.
On
October 2006, the National Commission for Human Rights
(Komnas HAM) released the results of an enquiry that
mentioned several human rights violations, including
arbitrary arrest and detention, torture, and enforced
disappearance, and highlighted the need for reparation to be
provided to the victims and/or their families. This report
was submitted to the Attorney General at the end of 2006.
...
ENDS