Beatings,
intimidation, burnings and rape are so commonplace that they are
considered the norm, with few victims ever bothering to lodge
complaints, said Restaria Hutabarat of the Jakarta-based Legal Aid
Foundation.The torture findings, published this week, were based on
yearlong interviews with 1,154 suspects and prison inmates in the
capital, Jakarta, and four other major cities in 2009 and 2010.
Questionnaires also were given to 419 police, prosecutors, judges,
wardens and rights activists who accompanied suspects during the legal
process.“We found that torture is systematic,” Hutabarat said
Friday, adding that it starts with the arrest and continues during
interrogations, trials and after imprisonment.“It is seen as a
normal way to get information and extract confessions.” Indonesia, a
sprawling archipelago nation of 237 million people, only emerged from
decades of dictatorship in 1998.Though it has made strides toward
democracy by scrapping repressive laws, freeing the media and allowing
citizens to directly pick their own leaders, a weak legal system
continues to be a black spot.National police spokesman Col. Boy Rafli Amar said he would study the 21-page report.“If
officers are abusing civilians, they should face sanctions,” he said.
“It’s unacceptable.” One of the main problems, researchers wrote, is
that under Indonesian law, torture carried out by law enforcers is not
considered a crime.And, as opposed to most other democratic
countries, evidence obtained through violence and intimidation is
legally accepted in the court.“This has to change,” said Hutabarat.Convicted drug user, Suliyanti, who spent five years in prison on drug charges, agreed with the report’s findings.The 48-year-old said she was abused from the moment of her arrest and until her release in 2007.“I
was kicked and beaten, even stripped and groped,” she told the
Associated Press. “I know many other female suspects and convicts who
were also raped.
Torturing suspects 'the norm’ in Indonesia
Publication Date:
Fri, 2010-12-31 21:08
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