The Violent Face of Indonesia
The Violent Face of Indonesia
Thang D. Nguyen
Jakarta
As 2004 came to an end, Western intelligence forces issued a
warning of a potential terrorist attack in a Hilton hotel in
Indonesia during the Christmas and New Year holidays.
Fortunately, no terrorist attacks happened. Unfortunately,
however, a killing took place at Jakarta Hotel Hilton on New
Year's Eve.
The suspect of the killing is tycoon Adiguna Sutowo, who shot
a bartender at Hilton's Fluid Club named Yohanes Haerudy Natong,
better known as Rudy, dead after the bartender told him that his
female companion's credit card had been rejected.
The police arrested Adiguna after the shooting, and he remains
in custody while investigation takes place.
Meanwhile, Rudy's death went almost unnoticed. For the most
part, it was overshadowed by the news of the tsunami that hit
Indonesia and several other Asian countries on Boxing Day.
But the killing of Rudy has not been covered well in the
Indonesian media because the suspect is a member of Jakarta's
elites. After all, Adiguna is the brother of Pontjo Sutowo, the
owner of the Jakarta Hilton, and the son of the late Ibnu Sutowo,
a former president of the state-owned oil and gas company
Pertamina.
In other words, the Indonesian media has been burned because
of its blows-up of scandals committed by Indonesia's elites.
For instance, last year, Bambang Harymurti, the chief editor
of the weekly news magazine Tempo, was found guilty of libeling
tycoon Tommy Winata, one of Indonesia's most powerful
businessmen.
Violence serves not only the Indonesian business world. In
fact, the culture of violence in Indonesia has started among, and
remains with, Indonesian political elites, namely, top members of
the Indonesian military (TNI).
Examples are plenty. In the Soeharto years, the TNI served him
well as a handy tool to silence the Indonesian media, non-
governmental organizations, and student activists.
At the same time, it has committed atrocities and human rights
violations in the pre-independence East Timor and other parts of
Indonesia.
Today, violence remains strong in the TNI's culture. A case in
point is the recent beating of anti-graft activist Farid Faqih by
Indonesian soldiers in Banda Aceh, the area worst hit by the
tsunami. The soldiers' alleged ground for the beating was that
Farid, who is the coordinator of the Government Watch (GOWA), had
stolen two truckloads of aid supplies donated by the military
wives' association (Dharma Pertiwi).
Did Farid deserve the beating? No. Whatever the cause of his
act, Farid should have been handed over to the Indonesian police
for investigation and further due courses. Whatever their crimes
may be, suspects or criminals, for that matter they are human
beings and should, therefore, be treated with dignity and
humanity. And what if Farid took the aid supplies to give to
tsunami victims? Or did he get beaten up because he is an anti-
corruption activist?
Likewise, Rudy did not deserve to die just because his
customers credit card did not work. For one thing, it happens all
the time that, either because of billing problems or over-limit
issues, credit cards are rejected.
Furthermore, Rudy was just doing his job. In other words, the
bartender did not insult Adiguna by telling him that his
companion's credit card had been rejected.
But worst of all, Rudy died just a few weeks before his
wedding. A 25-year-old college student, Rudy was taking extra
work as a bartender to save up for the happiest day of his life.
It won't happen now, and nothing can and will bring him back
to his fianci, family, and friends. They can only hope that
justice will be done.
"[Adiguna] has taken the life of the child [Rudy]. It's vital
that he must be punished as severely and appropriately as
possible," said Frumens da Gomez, Rudy's uncle.
And what about the murder of human rights activist Munir, who
was poisoned with arsenic on Sept. 7 last year in a Garuda flight
to the Netherlands? It has been five months since President
Susilo Bambang ordered an investigation of Munir's death. Alas,
nothing has been found thus far.
Together, Munir's murder, Rudy's death and Farid's beating
remind us that violence remains strong in the Indonesian society;
that injustice is what the poor and the weak get; and that
activists who make Indonesia a better place are in constant
danger.
As President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has just celebrated his
100th day in office, his people wish him well in the months to
come. He can't go wrong by focusing on such priorities as Aceh's
tsunami recovery, the economy, fighting corruption,
infrastructures, and education.
He will be wise, however, to make sure that justice is served
in the cases of Munir, Rudy, and Farid. If not, they may harm his
presidency.
Most importantly, if justice is not served in these cases,
they will damage Indonesia's international image as a young,
promising democracy.
Mr. President, progress awaits you. So does justice.
The writer is a Jakarta-based columnist. His new book is The
Indonesian Dream: Unity, Diversity, and Democracy in Times of
Distrust.