(New York) July 17, 2013 – A new law in Indonesia places
unnecessary and onerous restrictions on the activities of nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs), Human Rights Watch said today. Indonesia’s
donors should press the Indonesian government to amend the law to ensure
basic freedoms and a vibrant civil society.
On July 2, 2013,
Indonesia’s parliament enacted the Law on Mass Organizations
(“NGO law”) in the face of outspoken opposition from religious
groups, labor unions, human rights organizations, and environmental groups.
Provisions of the NGO law infringe upon the rights to freedom
of association, expression, and religion, and provide the government wide
latitude to obstruct NGO work. The law imposes a variety of vague
obligations and prohibitions on NGO activities, and severe limitations on
the creation of foreign-funded organizations.
“The NGO
law is a throwback to the repressive Suharto era by subjecting the
activities of civil society groups to excessive and unpredictable
government control,” said Phelim Kine, deputy Asia director.
“Indonesia’s NGOs play a vital role in the country’s
development and should be nurtured, not stifled, by government
regulation.”
After more than three decades of
authoritarian rule ending with the fall of Suharto in 1998, Indonesia now
has a vibrant civil society with thousands of NGOs working in fields from
development to human rights. The new law contains numerous restrictions
embodied in a 1985 law, the Law on Social Organizations, passed during the
Suharto dictatorship, but which have largely not been enforced since then.
The new law requires all NGOs to apply through the Home Affairs
Ministry for official approval to operate. The law does not provide any
details about the official approval application process, timelines for
official approval, or penalties for noncompliance.
The NGO law
empowers the government to decide on whether an organization has violated
the law, but requires the government to “consult” a court prior
to suspension of an NGO’s operations. The law does not provide any
details about this consultation process. The government can unilaterally
impose a six-month suspension on an NGO’s operations if the court
does not respond within two weeks of consultation. The law allows NGOs to
appeal a suspension to the Supreme Court, but does not elaborate on the
details of that process.
The NGO law obliges organizations to
adhere to respect for monotheism, regardless of their religious or secular
orientation, Human Rights Watch said. The new law, like the 1985 statute,
requires that NGOs adhere to the “breath, soul, and spirit” of
the concept of Pancasila, or “five principles,” an official
state philosophy that dictates “Belief in the one and only
God.” The law forbids NGOs from espousing
“anti-Pancasila” creeds including atheism, communism, and
Marxist-Leninism. The NGO law specifically states that NGOs must
“maintain the value of religion and belief in Almighty God,”
regardless of their religious or secular orientation. In February, the
United Nations special rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief, Heiner
Bielefeldt, warned that these provisions in a draft version of the law
could violate freedom of religion or belief particularly for individuals
with “non-theistic and theistic convictions.”
“The NGO law is being used as a vehicle for Orwellian thought
police,” Kine said. “The state has no business telling NGOs or
anyone else what they can and can’t believe.”
The
new law, as with the 1985 statute, places a variety of vague requirements
on NGOs that leave them exposed to improper government interference in
their work, Human Rights Watch said. These include obligatory support for
the “national unity and integrity of the Unitary Republic of
Indonesia” as well as “the value of religious, cultural…
ethical and moral norms.” The new law specifically prohibits
“blasphemous activities” by NGOs against any of the six
religions officially recognized under Indonesia’s 1965 blasphemy law.
No definitions are provided for these activities, which places NGOs at risk
of arbitrary or unfair interpretations of the law by hostile government
officials. In February, the UN special rapporteur on the rights of peaceful
assembly and association, Maina Kiai, stated that such prohibitions in a
draft version of the law were “illegitimate and should be amended
accordingly.”
|
The NGO law subjects foreign NGOs in
Indonesia to all new bureaucratic controls. The law bans foreign NGOs from
activities that may “disrupt the stability and integrity” of
Indonesia or “engage in activities that disrupt diplomatic
relations.” Foreign nationals who want to start an NGO in Indonesia
must have at least five consecutive years of legal residency in Indonesia,
and must deposit the sum of IDR10 billion (US$1 million) of their personal
wealth in the organization. The UN special rapporteur on the situation of
human rights defenders, Margaret Sekaggya, expressed concern in February
that such provisions would hamper the human rights work of civil society in
the country, “in particular of foreign societal organizations.”
“The new NGO law ominously suggests a less tolerant
official approach to civil society in Indonesia,” Kine said.
“The Indonesian government needs to recognize NGOs – both
domestic and foreign – as assets to a democratic society, not as
threats. Indonesia’s donors and friends should push for removal of
provisions in this new law that are hostile to basic freedoms and the
operational independence of NGOs.”
Human Rights Watch Press release
--
HREA - www.hrea.org
Human Rights Education Associates (HREA) is an international
non-governmental organisation that supports human rights learning; the
training of activists and professionals; the development of educational
materials and programming; and community-building through on-line
technologies.
--
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

No comments:
Post a Comment