ilustrasi dari karya grafis Made Bayak
“The six remaining prisoners awaiting execution as a result of their alleged participation in the 1965 coup attempt are all in a special section of L.P. Cipinang. Many of them were members of the Indonesian Communist Party (Partai Komunis Indonesia or PKI). The cruelty of the system is illustrated by the situation of two frail old men, one seventy, the other sixty-five, whom the authors of this report met in L.P. Cipinang. Arrested in 1968 and sentenced to death in the early 1970’s, they are subject to the constant psychological torture of not knowing when they will be executed. After the execution of four of their fellow inmates in February 1990, they were called by the internal security apparatus in early March and reportedly asked to give names of next of kin as well as to confirm that three of the six had not applied for a presidential pardon. Such steps are normally the prelude to execution, and worldwide appeals were issued on their behalf throughout March and early April 1990. As of May, international pressure appeared to have been one factor in the postponement of the executions, but to subject the six men first to more than 20 years of detention and to the belief that their executions were imminent is cruel and inhumane treatment, by any standard.”
“The last remaining political prisoner in Tangerang from the 1965 era, Mrs. Sundari Abdurrachman, was released in August 1989”.
***This report, by Elizabeth and James Vorenberg, is based on a visit to Indonesia from November 29 to December 13, 1989. James Vorenberg is the Roscoe Pound Professor of Law and former Dean of Harvard Law School. He was Executive Director of the President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice from 1965 to 1967. Elizabeth Vorenberg is a former president of the Massachusetts Civil Liberties Union. Together with Sidney Jones, Executive Director of Asia Watch, the Vorenbergs visited seven prisons; met with officials of the Directorate General of Corrections, lawyers, and criminal justice experts; and interviewed former prison inmates. In addition, they reviewed materials made available by Indonesian officials, earlier reports of Asia Watch, the International Commission of Jurists and Amnesty International.
unduh disini
ARSIP AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL : INDONESIA 1965 DOCUMENTS / DOKUMEN-DOKUMEN INDONESIA 1965
[arsip] Laporan Situasi Tahanan Politik di Indonesia Dari TAPOL ’65 Hingga Papua Barat (Amnesty International 1977, Human Rights Watch 2010, TAPOL 2013)
[unduh] Laporan Amnesty International Tentang Situasi dan Kondisi Tahanan Politik ’65 di Indonesia (1977)
[unduh] Himpunan ‘BULLETIN TAPOL’ tentang Tahanan Politik ‘1965 (*Genosida 1965-1966)/ TAPOL BULLETIN on Indonesian Political Prisoners ‘1965
INDIVIDUAL CASE HISTORIES TAPOL 65 – Laporan Amnesty Internasional Dari Pramoedya Ananta Toer, Charlotte Salawati, Karel Supit, I Made Sutayasa Hingga Sitor Situmorang
Napak Tilas ‘Kamp-kamp Konsentrasi” TAPOL ’65
simak 1600 ‘entry’ lainnya pada link berikut
Daftar Isi Perpustakaan Genosida 1965-1966
Road to Justice : State Crimes after Oct 1st 1965 (Jakartanicus)


Definisi yang diusulkan D. Nersessian (2010) untuk amandemen/ optional protocol Konvensi Anti-Genosida (1948) dan Statuta Roma (2000) mengenai Pengadilan Kejahatan Internasional. (disalin dari Harry Wibowo)Iklan