Dear President-elect Widodo,
Congratulations on your recent election. Human Rights Watch would like to wish you selamat berjuang, good luck, in carrying out your duties as president. We encourage you in particular to bring energy to protecting and promoting human rights in the country, and supporting renewed government initiatives.
Since the late 1980s, Human Rights Watch has worked on human rights issues in Indonesia and provided input to the Indonesian government. With your election victory, you and your new coalition government have an opportunity—and the responsibility—to address continuing human rights concerns in Indonesia. As Indonesia is a party to the major human rights treaties, we urge you to ensure that Indonesia lives up to its international legal obligations.
We write to you with specific recommendations that have important implications for the human rights of Indonesians, namely religious freedom, lack of accountability for abuses by security forces, women’s rights, freedom of expression, the situation in Papua, rights of child migrants and asylum seekers, domestic workers, corruption, indigenous land rights, and Indonesia’s role at the United Nations Human Rights Council.
We urge you and your government to make these issues a priority. We divided our recommendations on each subject into those which can have near-immediate impact on the human rights situation of large numbers of Indonesians, and those which will require longer-term commitment of political will and capital.
Freedom of Religion
Indonesia, as the world’s most populous Muslim nation, has a special role to play as a potential world leader on religious freedom. That leadership role would benefit Indonesia and expand its influence as a country that can successfully balance religious diversity with protection of the rights of religious minorities. Your administration has an opportunity and an obligation to the Indonesian people to go beyond the previous government’s rhetorical support for religious freedom by enforcing laws that protect religious minorities and prosecuting groups and individuals who seek to deny that right through threats and violence.
Over the last decade, the Indonesian government has often failed to protect members of religious minorities from discrimination and violence. The targets of that abuse include Ahmadis, Bahais, Christians, Shia, and Sufi Muslims, as well as followers of native faiths. The 1965 blasphemy law as well as the 1969 and 2006 decrees on building houses of worship often contributed to this violence. The blasphemy law especially criminalizes the practice of religion that deviates from the central tenets of Indonesia’s six officially “protected” religions.
According to the Setara Institute, a non-profit think tank monitoring religious freedom, violent attacks motivated by religious intolerance have increased from 91 cases in 2007 to 220 cases in 2013. The majority of that violence has occurred in West Java, but incidents targeting religious minorities have also occurred in Aceh, West Sumatra, East Java, West Nusa Tenggara, Riau, Lampung, and South Sulawesi.
To address the problem of religious intolerance and related violence, there are four measures that you can undertake shortly after assuming office that will have immediate impact in terms of addressing abuses against religious minorities. We urge your government to actively investigate and prosecute attacks on religious minorities and bolster protection of religious freedom by doing the following:
- Seek to amend or revoke regulations that discriminate against religious minorities or exacerbate intolerance in Indonesia, including the 1965 blasphemy law, the ministerial decrees on building houses of worship, and the 2008 anti-Ahmadiyah decree.
- Take immediate disciplinary action against all government officials, including cabinet members, governors, regents, and other officials who make statements or engage in actions that promote religious discrimination or condone violence.
- Seek criminal prosecution of government officials who incite violence against religious minorities.
- Enforce outstanding Supreme Court decisions authorizing the construction of churches and other houses of worship including GKI Yasmin and HKBP Filadelfia churches and sanction government officials who refuse to permit the construction of houses of worship.
There are also a series of measures that your government can and should do in the longer term to address the problem of religious intolerance and related violence. We urge you to:
- Organize a national outreach on basic principles of religious freedom and religious tolerance, including education programs disseminated through government media and schools, and stronger policies and responses to incitement to violence targeting religious minorities, including greater clarity on when freedom of expression crosses the line into incitement to violence.
- Review and restructure the functions of the Ministry of Religious Affairs to ensure better representation for the hundreds of religions and beliefs in Indonesia and the promotion of meaningful inter-faith dialogue and inter-religious education.
- Ensure that Ahmadiyah and Shia who have been displaced from their home villages by militant Islamists now living in temporary displacement camps in East Java, Jakarta and West Nusa Tenggara, are allowed to safely return to their homes.
Lack of Accountability for the Security Forces
We are encouraged that during your election campaign, you committed to investigating the arrest, torture, and enforced disappearance of pro-democracy activists by security forces, including at the end of the Suharto regime.
However, there is still widespread impunity for members of the security forces responsible for serious violations of human rights in Indonesia.
While Indonesia has implemented significant reforms to the military in recent years, members of Indonesia's security forces—particularly Detachment 88 and Kopassus— continue to engage in serious abuses. Human Rights Watch research has revealed a pattern of arbitrary detention and ill-treatment—particularly in the two Papuan provinces—and the failure of military courts to investigate adequately or to prosecute alleged serious human rights abuses by military personnel.
In the few military trials for which information is publicly available, military prosecutors brought relatively insignificant charges, and any sentences handed down by military judges have been extremely lenient. For instance, in a 2010 case where soldiers tortured two Papuans for three days in Tingginambut, some of which was captured on film, a military tribunal convicted three soldiers, but sentenced them to terms of only 8 to 10 months.
A bellwether test from the past decade is the case of Munir bin Thalib, a respected human rights advocate murdered on a Garuda Indonesia flight on September 4, 2004. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said at that time that finding Munir's murderer is “the test of our history.” On December 31, 2008, a Jakarta court acquitted Maj. Gen. Muchdi Purwopranjono, a former deputy in the State Intelligence Agency, of Munir's murder in a trial marred by witness coercion and intimidation. On June 15, 2009, the Supreme Court rejected an appeal by state prosecutors of Muchdi's acquittal.
Human Rights Watch understands the difficulties in investigating a killing where there is strong evidence that state intelligence authorities were involved. But there are serious concerns about events in the lead-up to the trial and the quality of the evidence. Witnesses were possibly intimidated into changing their statements, a key witness fled the country, and the prosecution was weak.
Accountability for past abuses in Aceh continues to be elusive. Vice President-elect Jusuf Kalla played a key role in negotiating an end to the conflict in Aceh in 2005, but there is still no serious effort to establish a tribunal to look at crimes committed after the agreement, as required by the 2006 Law on Aceh Governance, or a truth and reconciliation commission. The tribunal was supposed to be in operation by August 31, 2007. Those involved in extrajudicial killings and other serious abuses should be held to account to provide justice for the victims and to deter future violations.
Besides these cases are the literally hundreds of thousands of other victims of Suharto-era violence. Still unaddressed are the mass killings of 1965-66, security force impunity for endemic violations in counterinsurgency operations in East Timor, past crimes in Papua, killings in Lampung, Tanjung Priok, and other prominent cases.
Indonesia has taken an important step by signing the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance in September 2010. Under the convention, Indonesia is obligated to investigate alleged disappearances effectively, prosecute those responsible, and provide a proper remedy for victims, including the relatives of disappeared persons.
There are several measures that your government can undertake shortly after taking office that will have immediate impact in addressing the problem of impunity in Indonesia. We urge you to:
- Establish an independent and credible investigation of recent allegations that members of the police, including members of Detachment 88, tortured suspected separatists in their custody.
- Implement parliament’s 2009 recommendation to open an investigation into the emblematic case of the enforced disappearance of 13 students in the late-1990s and provide compensation to the families of the disappeared.
- Publish the report of a presidential fact-finding mission on Munir’s murder. Order the National Police to provide the new evidence and ask the Attorney General’s Office to immediately ask for a Supreme Court review of the murder of Munir bin Thalib with strong measures to protect witnesses.
- Order the Ministry of Home Affairs to fully support the Acehnese bylaw on setting a truth and reconciliation commission in Aceh without waiting for an establishment of a national commission.
- Urge parliament to ratify the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance.
There are also measures that your government can and should do in the longer term to address the problem of lack of accountability for abuses by the security forces. We urge you to:
- Ensure that those members of the Indonesian security forces implicated in serious human rights violations, including those involving command responsibility, are credibly and impartially investigated and disciplined or prosecuted as appropriate.
- Revive a bill proposed in the House of Representatives that would provide civilian criminal court jurisdiction over military personnel responsible for offenses against civilians.
Women’s Rights
Indonesia has seen a rise in discriminatory regulations against women, ranging from mandatory dress codes—especially for civil servants and female students—to limited evening mobility unless accompanied by their muhrim—fathers, brothers, spouses, or sons. Women civil servants and students who do not follow these regulations face penalties including demotion and expulsion.
The National Commission on Violence Against Women stated in August 2013 that there are 79 regencies where the hijab is mandatory. The mandatory hijab is also imposed on Christian girls in some provinces such as Aceh and West Sumatra. Local governments in Aceh enacted laws that limit women’s freedom of expression and movement. In the city of Lhokseumawe, a regulation bans women from straddling motorcycles. Bireun regency has forbidden women from all dancing in public while Meulaboh regency bans women from wearing pants.
Indonesia also needs to take additional measures to prevent and respond to all forms of violence against women, including domestic violence and female genital mutilation (FGM). The prevalence of FGM and the consequences it has for women’s physical and mental health are under-reported. FGM seriously impairs girl’s and women’s physical integrity and subjects them to abuse of their rights to health, to be free from violence, to life and physical integrity, to non-discrimination, and to be free from cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment. It is not even clear whether the Health Ministry issued a circular banning the practice of FGM.
We are encouraged that during the election campaign Vice President-elect Kalla promised that if elected he would support a government review of discriminatory bylaws in Indonesia, including the mandatory hijab regulations. We urge you to:
- Direct the Ministry of Home Affairs to review and eliminate all discriminatory bylaws against women in Indonesia, including ones pertaining to mandatory dress regulations, the limitation of women’s mobility, and freedom of expression, including dance.
- Direct the Ministry of Health to clarify that all forms of FGM are banned and launch awareness campaigns about FGM; create a referral system where women and girls can report and seek health services, including mental health services; take disciplinary and other action against licensed and other health workers who participate in such procedures, and collect data on FGM to assist in its elimination.
There are also a series of other measures that your government can and should do in the longer term to address abuses of women’s rights in Indonesia. We urge you to:
- Press parliament to enact laws governing gender equality in consultation with women’s rights groups and in accordance with international human rights standards.
- Urge parliament to undertake criminal investigations and ensure adequate redress for women from Aceh, the Moluccan Islands, Papua, and Poso who suffered sexual violence from members of security forces and armed groups during armed conflicts. Investigator should be well trained to handle cases of sexual violence.
Freedom of Expression
Indonesia has a diverse and lively media, but the right to freedom of expression has been undermined by the use of criminal and civil defamation laws to silence criticism of the government. Criminal defamation charges have been filed against individuals after they held public demonstrations protesting corruption, wrote letters to the editor complaining about fraud, registered formal complaints with the authorities, published news reports about sensitive subjects, and tweeted critical remarks about government officials.
The UN Human Rights Committee, the independent body of experts that interprets the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), has said that “defamation laws must be crafted with care to ensure that they… do not serve, in practice, to stifle freedom of expression. All such laws, in particular penal defamation laws, should include such defenses as the defense of truth and they should not be applied with regard to forms of expression that are not, of their nature, subject to verification.” Criminal defamation laws have a chilling effect on freedom of expression and work against the public interest by deterring people from speaking out about corruption or other misconduct by public officials.
Criminal defamation investigations and prosecutions can have a dramatic impact on the lives of those accused. Some of those charged with defamation lost their jobs. Others suffered professional setbacks while they endured lengthy prosecutions, some of which lasted for years. Some reported that their personal and professional relationships were strained by the stigma of prosecution or conviction. Some were imprisoned.
Offenses in Indonesia's criminal code such as treason (makar) and “inciting hatred” (haatzai artikelen) are used to suppress peaceful acts of free expression, including demonstrations and acts of flag-rising in Papua and the Moluccas where there are separatist movements. Criminal libel, slander, and “insult” laws are also problematic, as they have been invoked against individuals who have raised controversial issues concerning public officials.
There are two steps that you can undertake shortly after taking office that will have immediate impact in addressing abuses of freedom of expression in Indonesia. We urge you to:
- Release the dozens of political prisoners—primarily from Papua and the Moluccan Islands—imprisoned for engaging in nonviolent demonstrations, raising flags, and displaying pro-independence symbols.
- Call on public officials to refrain from filing criminal defamation claims when the criticism against them relates to things they have done or are alleged to have done in their official capacity.
There are also a series of other measures that your government should do in the longer term to address abuses of freedom of expression. We urge you to press parliament to:
- Amend the Law on Mass Organizations to eliminate those provisions that restrict freedom of expression, religion, and rights of association.
- Repeal criminal defamation laws, including provisions in the Criminal Code and the Internet law that violate the internationally recognized right to freedom of expression, replacing them with civil defamation provisions that contain adequate safeguards to protect freedom of expression from unnecessary limitations.
- Repeal laws that criminalize defamation and “insulting” public officials, which Indonesian authorities have used to silence anti-corruption activists, human rights defenders, and citizens who publicly aired consumer complaints or allegations of misconduct.
Situation in Papua
Human Rights Watch recognizes that Papua presents unique governance challenges for your government. The ongoing low-level conflict with the small and poorly organized Free Papua Movement (OPM) places responsibilities on the government to ensure security for the population. However, the security forces are failing to distinguish between violent acts and peaceful expression of political views, which your government should protect. Although flag-raisings and other peaceful expressions of pro-independence sentiment in Papua have been denounced as treasonous, the government’s heavy-handed response to these activities has resulted in numerous human rights violations. Your administration has an obligation to keep the population safe while respecting everyone’s basic rights.
Over the last three years alone, Human Rights Watch has documented dozens of cases where police, military, intelligence officers, and prison guards have used excessive force when dealing with Papuans exercising their rights to peaceful assembly and association. The government also frequently arrests and prosecutes Papuan protesters for peacefully advocating independence or other political change. As of July 2014, 69 Papuan activists are imprisoned for “treason,” according to the nongovernmental prisoner rights advocacy organization Papuan Behind Bars.
The political prisoners include Filep Karma, a civil servant, who is serving a 15-year prison sentence for raising the Morning Star flag — a West Papua independence symbol — in December 2004. The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention said that Karma was not given a fair trial in Indonesia and asked the Indonesian government to immediately and unconditionally release him. Indonesia has rejected the UN recommendation.
Human Rights Watch takes no position on the right to self-determination, but we oppose imprisonment of individuals who peacefully express support for self-determination.
Restrictions on access by foreign journalists and human rights monitors to Papua exacerbate a climate where security forces can act with impunity by keeping abuses out of the public eye and making investigations more difficult. The government blocks international media from freely reporting in Papua by limiting access to only those foreign reporters who get special official permission to visit the area. The government rarely approves such applications or indefinitely delays their processing, hampering efforts by journalists and civil society groups to report on breaking events. Two French reporters from Franco-German Arte TV, detained in Papua since August 6, 2014 for “illegal reporting,” are the most recent targets of Indonesia’s Papua censorship obsession.
There are three measures that you can undertake shortly after taking office that will have immediate impact in addressing the human rights problems in Papua. We urge you to:
- End restrictions on access to Papua for independent observers, including international journalists and human rights organizations, so that they can visit Papua without need for specific permission or approval.
- Comply with the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention’s September 2, 2011 request for the immediate and unconditional release of Filep Karma and other political prisoners in Papua.
- Order the Indonesian military, including the Special Forces (Kopassus), to cease the unlawful surveillance of peaceful activists, politicians, and clergy immediately, and to ensure that civilian authorities in Papua retain responsibility for basic law enforcement.
There are also a series of other measures that your government can and should do in the longer term to address human rights abuses in Papua. We urge you to:
- Review the 2007 Government Regulation No. 77, which bans the use of “separatist flags” in Papua, the Moluccas Islands, and Aceh.
- Order an independent and impartial investigation into various allegations of human rights violations in Papua, including killings, torture, arbitrary arrest, rape, and illegal detention. Such an investigation should hold security forces accountable and bring the perpetrators of such abuses to justice.
Domestic Workers
An estimated 2.6 million Indonesians, including hundreds of thousands of girls, are employed as domestic workers in other people's households, performing tasks such as cooking, cleaning, laundry, child care, and sometimes working at their employers’ businesses. Another estimated two million women migrate abroad as domestic workers in Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, and the Middle East.
Within Indonesia, many domestic workers labor 14 to 18 hour days, seven days a week, with no day off and make a fraction of the prevailing minimum wage. Girls are at heightened risk of abuse. Many employers forbid child domestic workers from leaving the house where they work, isolate them from the outside world, and prohibit them from attending school. In the worst cases, girls are physically, psychologically, and sexually abused by their employers or their employers’ family members.
Indonesia’s labor law, the Manpower Act of 2003, excludes all domestic workers from the basic labor rights afforded to formal workers, such as a minimum wage, overtime pay, an eight-hour workday and 40-hour workweek, weekly day of rest, and vacation. This has a discriminatory impact on women and girls, who constitute the vast majority of domestic workers. This exclusion in the law allows abuse to flourish in domestic work, which is one of the most common sectors for forced labor and trafficking.
Migrant domestic workers face the risk of abuse both at home and abroad. Many prospective domestic workers do not receive accurate or full information during the recruitment process and pay excessive fees that leave them heavily indebted. Those who face abuse while abroad and seek help from Indonesian embassies abroad may spend long periods in overcrowded shelters with little hope of redress.
There are a series of measures that your government can and should do in the longer term to address abuses of the rights of domestic workers, particularly children and migrants. We urge you to:
- Pass a Domestic Workers Law that guarantees that domestic workers receive the same rights as other workers, such as a written contract, a minimum wage, overtime, a weekly day of rest, an eight-hour workday, rest periods during the day, national holidays, vacation, paid sick leave, workers compensation, and social security.
- Direct the Ministry of Manpower and provincial and district governments to strictly enforce 15 as the minimum age of employment for all sectors, including domestic work. Give priority to underage domestic workers for removal and recovery assistance to help them return to school and rebuild their lives.
- Ensure that police have the commitment and resources necessary to comply with their obligations under the Domestic Violence Act, in particular to provide temporary protection to a victim within 24 hours of knowing or receiving a report of violence in the household.
- Improve regulation and oversight of the recruitment process for migrant domestic workers, including through cooperation with migrant-receiving countries, unannounced inspections, and the prohibition of recruitment fees to workers.
- Ratify the 2011 International Labor Organization Convention Concerning Decent Work for Domestic Workers and consult with social partners on designing effective implementation strategies.
Rights of Asylum Seekers and Child Migrants
Indonesia unnecessarily detains and fails to protect the rights of migrants and asylum-seekers, including children, en-route to Australia.
Migrants and asylum seekers arrive in Indonesia after fleeing persecution, violence, and poverty in Somalia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Burma, and elsewhere and are subject to detention. Indonesia does not provide asylum seekers and migrants a way to challenge their detention. Indonesian law permits up to 10 years of immigration detention.
Each year, hundreds of child migrants are detained in abysmal conditions, without access to lawyers, and sometimes beaten. Others are left to fend for themselves, without any assistance with food or shelter. Unaccompanied migrant children—who travel without parents or other adults to protect them—fall into a legal void. With no government agency responsible for their guardianship, no one responds to their needs. Some children languish in detention, while others are left on the streets.
There is one measure that you can undertake shortly after taking office that will have immediate impact in addressing abuses of the rights of child migrants and asylum seekers. We urge you to:
- Direct the Ministry of Law and Human Rights, which oversees immigration offices, to stop detaining unaccompanied migrant children and provide them safe and open accommodations.
There are also longer term measures that we urge you to undertake to improve the rights of all asylum seekers and migrants. We urge you to:
- Urge parliament to ratify the 1951 Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol and implement their provisions by enacting legislation that conforms to international standards by providing a fair and timely asylum process.
- Issue clear standards for immigration detention facilities, provide training for staff that ensures the protection of the rights and safety of all detainees, and promptly investigate allegations of misconduct to ensure that violence, ill-treatment, and corruption do not occur in migrant detention centers.
- Bring migrant detention center conditions up to international standards relating to overcrowding, water and sanitation, nutrition, and access to recreation, among others.
Corruption
Anti-corruption measures are critical to ensuring that human rights protections are enjoyed by all Indonesians. We commend the progress made by the Anti-Corruption Commission (Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi), particularly in its recent efforts to coordinate reform in the forest sector, but it is not enough. Sustained, rigorous efforts to root out corruption in the police, judiciary, and military will help stem the loss of tax revenues from lucrative natural resources, especially the forestry and plantation sectors. Strong leadership from yourself and the Ministry of Forestry is needed to implement anti-corruption reforms, such as mechanisms to ensure the legal origin of wood products and the full payment of forestry taxes.
There are also a series of measures that your government should take in the longer term to address abuses related to corruption. We urge you to:
- Ensure corruption investigations sufficiently extend to the military, including the use of anti-corruption and money laundering legislation to fight corruption in the forestry and other natural resource sectors.
- Fully implement and enforce the Freedom of Information Act, among other things so that citizens and civil society organizations can play a more active role in supporting anti-corruption work.
- Amend the timber verification system to include assessment of government and company compliance with laws protecting local land rights and compensation agreements. Timber legality certificates should be withheld until civil society monitors have received all necessary information to conduct oversight and their complaints have been addressed by the auditors.
- Provide clear support for the Anti-Corruption Commission’s work on natural resource sector reform.
- Extend the mandate and provide clear support for the Presidential Delivery Unit on Development (UKP4), in particular its work on bureaucratic reform for transparency and anti-corruption.
Indigenous Land Rights
Mismanagement and corruption associated with forestry and agricultural concessions fuel land conflicts, sometimes violent, between companies and local communities. Government authorities have routinely violated the rights of forest-dependent communities in allocating land use and granting natural resource companies extraction rights. However, a landmark 2013 constitutional court ruling found inclusion of customary territories within state forests to be unconstitutional. This ruling represents a significant and laudable shift toward the correction of decades of injustice. However, this ruling’s implementation requires the government to map and register these lands and negotiate their removal from existing concessions.
There is one measure that you can undertake after taking office that will have immediate impact in addressing human rights abuses related to indigenous land rights. We urge you to:
- Issue a Presidential Instruction to implement the May 2013 constitutional court decision on excluding traditional territories from state forest and industrial concessions. It should include clear instructions for reforming customary land registration procedures to ensure transparency and participation of communities and civil society observers, and create a functional grievance mechanism accessible to the rural poor for resolution of individual land claims.
There are also other measures that your government should take in the longer term to address abuses of the rights of indigenous people and stem the rising tide of land conflicts and rural violence. We urge you to:
- Extend the mandate and provide clear support for the “One Map Initiative” to address the overlapping claims between natural resource companies and indigenous communities, as well as the Anti-Corruption Commission’s forest sector reform efforts.
- Provide leadership and support for the passage of the Indigenous People’s Bill, and for interagency coordination of mapping and recognition of indigenous land rights.
UN Human Rights Council
Indonesia was one of the 47 founding members of the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council and has announced it would run for a new term for 2015 – 2017. Prior to 2011, Indonesia systematically voted against all country-specific resolutions put to vote in the Council, with the exception of all the resolutions focusing on the human rights situation in Palestine and other occupied Arab territories. Since August 2011, Indonesia has modified its approach to the Human Rights Council by abstaining on most of the country specific resolutions presented for adoption to the Council, and supported the Council’s action on the grave human rights violations committed in Syria.
As a major player at the Human Rights Council, Indonesia engaged on many of the Council's debates on country-specific situations, but advocated for weakening language on violations and strengthening language on progress in these countries. In order to fully fulfill the mandate of the UN Human Rights Council to “address situations of violations of human rights, including gross and systematic violations, and make recommendations thereon” and to “respond promptly to human rights emergencies,” Indonesia should not use its regional leadership to shield countries from criticism on well-documented human rights concerns, but rather use the Council's country-specific debates to press them to engage in much needed reforms. We urge your government to:
- Direct the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to commit fully to implement the UN Human Rights Council’s mandate, including addressing and preventing situations of rights violations and responding promptly to emergencies.
- Base Indonesia’s positions on an objective assessment of the needs of victims on the ground, the international obligations of the government concerned, the actual access or lack of access into areas where human rights violations occur, and the actual commitment or lack of commitment of the government concerned to remedy past and prevent future atrocities.
- Ensure that Indonesia’s positions are consistent with international human rights law and international humanitarian law and commit to use the expertise of treaty bodies, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and special procedures of the Human Rights Council in this regard.
- Consider supporting Council action on new situations of violations whenever new crises occur.
Thank you for your consideration. We would appreciate the opportunity to discuss these and other human rights issues with you and members of your administration.
Sincerely,
Brad Adams
Executive Director, Asia division
Human Rights Watch
CC:
Vice President-elect Jusuf Kalla