FPI members stage protest during PKI court session
FPI members stage protest during PKI court session
Hera Diani, The Jakarta Post/Jakarta
Some 50 members of hard-line Muslim groups gathered outside the
Central Jakarta District Court on Wednesday, while dozens of
others clad in white robes packed a courtroom on the second
floor.
"We urge the judges not to bow to the demands of these people
who used to butcher Muslims but now ask for justice. Where's the
logic?" said Eka Jaya, claiming to be a representative of the
Islam Defenders Front (FPI).
"If the judges accept their suit, this means war, jihad in the
name of Allah."
By "these people", Eka was referring to a group of around 100,
most over the age of 65, who had come from all over the country
to attend the session. He also referred to them as communists.
They are among those suspected in the past of being members or
affiliates of the outlawed Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), and
who are now seeking rehabilitation and compensation from the
government as they have been living as social and political
outcasts for the past forty years.
Represented by the Jakarta Legal Aid Institute (LBH Jakarta),
the people -- including their families -- filed a class action
against President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, and four previous
Indonesian presidents: Soeharto, B.J. Habibie, Abdurrahman Wahid
and Megawati Soekarnoputri.
After being delayed several times, the session finally got
underway on Wednesday.
However, proceedings were constantly disturbed by the
group of hard-liners, which prompted presiding judge Cicut
Sutiarso to call for order.
For Toga Tambunan, 65, the animosity was nothing new, as he
said he had been stigmatized as a communist all his life, which
hampered him and his family members from getting decent jobs and
educations.
The PKI was accused by the previous Soeharto administration of
plotting the 1965 failed coup, in which several Army generals
were killed and which led to the slaughtering of communists,
their sympathizers and others accused of being in some way
involved with the coup or the PKI.
Historians, however, have different theories as to who
provoked the coup.
Soeharto, who rose to power following the failed coup, ordered
all people linked to the PKI to be imprisoned without trial.
During the 32 years of his rule, Soeharto effectively took
away the rights of the alleged PKI members and sympathizers --
including their families -- as citizens.
"I was imprisoned for almost 14 years in my hometown
Banjarmasin (South Kalimantan). I was forced to quit my job as a
civil servant, and had difficulty finding another," said Toga.
This was all because he joined the PKI's subsidiary
organization, a cultural institute called Lekra.
The group of suspected PKI members demanded that their
economic, social and cultural rights be restored and that the
government revoke any discriminative laws against them.
A handful of discriminative laws have been revoked, enabling
people who were jailed for their alleged involvement in the party
to vote in the previous legislative election. However, 24
discriminative regulations are still in place.
"The plaintiffs are also demanding that the government give
them back their dignity by apologizing via the national media and
paying material losses in amounts to be specified later, plus Rp
10 billion (US$1.07 million) in non-material losses," said lawyer
Gatot from LBH Jakarta.
The hard-liners finally dispersed in the afternoon. The second
session will be held next Thursday.