Advertisement

Indonesian government wants to revive Suharto-era law that makes it illegal to insult the president

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Then-Indonesian President Suharto shoots targets with a rifle at the family's Tapos ranch in West Java, in 1994. The Indonesia government wants to revive a Suharto-era law that bans insulting the country's president. Photo: AP

Indonesian legislators and human rights activists have criticised a government proposal to make insulting the president illegal, citing concern for freedom of speech in the world’s third-largest democracy.

Advertisement

The proposal aims to revive a law from the era of former authoritarian ruler Suharto that was used to silence dissidents with jail sentences and fines.

If passed, critics say the law will further erode the sliding popularity of President Joko Widodo, who won election in 2014 promising major reforms and clean government.

The original law was struck down by the Constitutional Court in 2006, a move that was hailed as a milestone for Indonesia’s young democracy.

But Widodo said he supports reviving it.

Advertisement
Indonesian president Joko Widodo. Photo: AP
Indonesian president Joko Widodo. Photo: AP
"This is to protect both those who want to criticise ... and also the president as a symbol of the nation in the long term, not just me," Widodo said this week.

A spokesman for the president said not everyone who spoke out would run foul of the law.

Advertisement