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Marcus Mietzner
The death of noted human rights activist Munir, on board a Garuda plane
to Amsterdam on 7 September 2004 has not only shocked his family and
friends. The outpouring of public grief in the days after he died
indicated that Indonesia had lost one of its most important societal
and political figures. At the age of 38, Munir was already the
conscience of a nation that had passed four decades of authoritarian
rule and was now hoping for a future without repression,
state-sponsored violence and censorship.
Munir’s potential went well beyond his expertise in and commitment to
human rights issues. In recent years, Munir had become an eminent
authority on defence and security matters, enabling him to understand
and criticise the structural causes of the violence that had confronted
him since the early stages of his career as a legal aid worker.
Departing for the Netherlands on the evening of 6 September, Munir had
planned to deepen his studies of international human rights law and the
implications of armed conflict for democratic consolidation and
individual freedoms. He had chosen Aceh as the topic of his Masters
thesis at the University of Utrecht, and was determined to begin
doctoral studies after that.
It is the thought of the Munir who could have returned to Indonesia in
2008 or 2009 that makes his death so extraordinarily tragic. The
development of his already exceptional analytical skills would have
allowed him to work even more intensively for the creation of the
policies and institutions needed for a more democratic political system.
Born in 1965, the year of Suharto’s ascent to power, Munir was raised
in a middle-class family of Arabic descent. After his entry into the
Faculty of Law at Brawijaya University in Malang, he began researching
labour issues. His studies provided him with first-hand experience of
the economic difficulties and political constraints experienced by
workers and farmers under Suharto’s New Order regime. He graduated in
1989 and began a career in the legal aid foundation YLBHI, which led
him from Surabaya and Semarang to the organisation’s headquarters in
Jakarta.
After having defended many of the New Order’s leading dissidents
against the judicial apparatus of the regime, Munir founded the
Commission for Disappeared Persons and Victims of Violence (KontraS) in
early 1998, at the height of the political crisis that would eventually
lead to Suharto’s fall. His organisation was able to shed light on the
many kidnappings carried out by the military in the dying days of the
regime. It continued its scrutiny of the security forces and other
state institutions during the post-authoritarian transition.
Not surprisingy, these activities created enemies. Military officers
felt cornered by Munir’s sharp and unrelenting criticism, precisely
because they felt that he had unrivalled knowledge of their internal
doctrine and procedures. Particularly in recent years, Munir had
learned the military’s vocabulary and technical code language, making
it easy for him to outplay senior officers in their own domain. Some
military leaders admired him for his intellect, others didn’t.
His stressful agenda and the constant threats to his work and life
began to undermine Munir’s health. In August 2001, a bomb was thrown at
his house in Malang, followed by several attacks on his offices that
destroyed computer files and injured his staff. Although he stood firm
and even created a new organisation, IMPARSIAL, in June 2002, he began
to realise that he owed his wife Suciwati and his two children a less
demanding and risky existence.
Keen to recharge his batteries and expand his academic expertise, Munir
considered offers for a scholarship that could both temporarily remove
him from his hectic schedule and prepare him for even more intense
societal and political engagement after his return. He finally chose to
accept the offer by the Dutch government to continue his studies in
Utrecht.
During a farewell party on 3 September, I had the last opportunity to
chat with my friend of many years. His mind was focused on the task
that lay ahead. His only concerns were that continued contact with
colleagues at home and the temptations of European soccer might
distract him from his studies. Only three days later, the news of
Munir’s death robbed Indonesia not only of a unique intellectual and
activist, but of one of its brightest hopes for the future.
Marcus Mietzner (mamietzner@yahoo.com) lives in Jakarta where he is completing a PhD on military politics in the post-Suharto period.
Editor’s note: As Inside Indonesia goes to press, it has
been revealed that the autopsy on Munir’s body carried out by the Dutch
Forensic Institute discovered high levels of arsenic in his blood. The
Dutch foreign ministry concluded that a criminal investigation was
justified and conveyed this view to the Indonesian government.
Inside Indonesia 81: Jan-Mar 2005
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