Indonesia
has ignored last-minute appeals by foreign leaders and executed six people
convicted of drug trafficking. Analyst Yohanes Sulaiman tells DW President
Jokowi is trying to convey the image of a "decisive leader."
Deutsche Welle, 20 Jan 2015
Brazil and
the Netherlands recalled their ambassadors from Indonesia on January 18 after
Jakarta ignored their pleas and executed two of their citizens by firing squad
along with four other drug offenders from Vietnam, Malawi, Nigeria and
Indonesia. The six were the first people executed under new Indonesian
President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo, who has disappointed rights activists
by voicing support for capital punishment.
President
Jokowi defended the executions, saying those convicted of drug trafficking will
not receive a presidential pardon since Indonesia is facing an
"emergency" over drug use. Jakarta had an unofficial four-year
moratorium on executions until 2013, when five people were put before the
firing squad. There were no executions last year.
In a DW
interview, Indonesia analyst Yohanes Sulaiman says President Jokowi appears to
have been under no apparent pressure to restart executions and that he is
simply trying to convey the image of being a decisive leader in a country where
there seems to be public support for the death penalty.
DW: Why
does Indonesia have such a strong policy against drug traffickers?
'Overt
international pressure to stop the
executions will backfire spectacularly,'
says Sulaiman
|
Yohannes
Sulaiman: Drug abuse is a big problem in Indonesia. Each year the number of
addicts is increasing. Since it is believed that the majority of drugs in
Indonesia are imported, the government believes that by imposing harsh
punishment on traffickers, they could reduce or halt the importation of drugs.
Why has
President Joko Widodo decided to stick to the country's policy of executing
drug offenders?
There is
actually no overt pressure from either the party, the media, or the public.
However, while there are a lot of discussions on death penalty, generally the
public and media in Indonesia are clamoring for the death penalty to be
expanded to people engaged in corruption.
A quick
glimpse of the media in the past couple of years reveals that there have been
few discussions on the death penalty being imposed on drug traffickers - except
during a couple of occasions when there were new developments such as the
release of Schapelle Corby, an Australian who was convicted and imprisoned for
drug smuggling. So the sudden restart of executions comes out of the blue.
My guess is
that President Jokowi wants to show "results" and his
"decisiveness" especially in the first 100 days of his
administration. Keep in mind that the issue of "being decisive" has
hobbled Jokowi since the election campaigning, where the opposition kept
claiming that he was and would be a very weak leader.
It seems to
me that burning ships engaged in illegal fishing and re-imposing the death
penalty are things that he could do to stress and buttress the idea that he is
a strong, decisive leader, while giving him a huge boost in popularity. In fact,
if he stops executions now, he could actually lose a huge amount of prestige
and popularity. The death penalty genie is already out of the bottle.
How do you
think the latest executions will affect Indonesia's relations with nations such
as Brazil or the Netherlands?
I don't see
any long-term damage in ties between Indonesia and the Netherlands. Indonesia
is one of the most important countries in Southeast Asia and, one could argue,
even in the world, thanks to its demographic and geostrategic position. The
Dutch have a strong economic relationship with Indonesia - the Netherlands is
one of the five main investors in Indonesia. The situation is similar with
Brazil, with bilateral trade booming.
Sulaiman: 'The death penalty is popular in Indonesia' |
Furthermore,
both Netherlands and Brazil have close political ties with the country. It is
therefore very doubtful that both countries would risk this strong relationship.
So while there will be a short-term dip in relations, I don't think this will
have a strong impact in the long run.
What about
the reactions from human rights groups?
The human
rights groups are obviously disappointed, considering many believed that Jokowi
would have much better track record in terms of human rights than his electoral
rival Prabowo Subianto, who was suspected of being involved in human rights
abuses back during the era of Indonesian strongman Suharto.
However,
the main question is: Who voted for Jokowi? As already mentioned, the death
penalty is popular in Indonesia even though you can argue that its
effectiveness is overrated and it is not applied fairly.
What's
important is to convey the image that you have a decisive president willing to
impose the death penalty on those who are bent on poisoning the minds of the
youths with drugs. That could be the image that wins the next election - or
shows at least that the president is doing something in the first 100 days of
his administration.
Will
diplomatic appeals help prevent other executions?
It is a
difficult question to answer because there are plenty of factors that might
influence this. Obviously, overt international pressure, I think, will backfire
spectacularly. The last thing Jokowi wants to have is the image of him
kowtowing to foreign governments and pardoning drug smugglers on the death row.
Sulaiman: 'The government believes it could halt the importation of drugs by imposing harsh punishment on traffickers' |
The
opposition and the media would have a field day condemning the government and
that also runs counter to the image that Jokowi wants to cultivate, which is
the image of him as a "decisive leader" who wants Indonesia to be
respected abroad.
I think
diplomatic appeals, done quietly and with some incentives behind it, could
prevent the executions. The death penalty genie is already out of the bottle,
so there's no way that Jokowi could declare that he would stop the executions.
But, he
could use the oldest trick in the book: just do nothing and people will forget
about it. In order to do that, though, the Australians should put something on
the table in exchange for another moratorium on the death penalty. That might
work, but it has to be done very quietly.
Yohanes
Sulaiman is Lecturer in International Relations and Political Science at the
Indonesian Defense University.
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