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Indonesia court orders President Joko Widodo to apologise for Papua Internet curbs

Indonesia court orders President Joko Widodo to apologise for Papua Internet curbs
Indonesia's President Joko Widodo attends an ASEAN leaders summit with United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, in Bangkok, Thailand November 3, 2019.
PHOTO: Reuters

JAKARTA - An Indonesian court on Wednesday (June 3) ordered President Joko Widodo to make an official apology after ruling that his government's decision to rein in Internet speeds to contain civil unrest in the Papua region last year was unlawful.

Demonstrations broke out in a number of cities last August after Papuan students in the city of Surabaya on Java island were allegedly taunted with racist slurs.

As unrest flared across the provinces of Papua and West Papua, the government said it throttled Internet access to"prevent hoaxes from spreading" because this could trigger more violence.

In Wednesday's ruling, the Jakarta administrative court ordered the central government, including Mr Joko, to make an official apology for "slowing and/or cutting Internet access" to the Indonesian people and media organisations.

The court ordered the government to publish the apology in three national newspapers and broadcast it on six television stations within one month of the ruling.

The lawsuit was filed by Indonesia's Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI) and advocacy group the South-east Asia Freedom of Expression Network (SAFEnet).

It argued the Internet throttling, particularly at a time of civil unrest, was a human rights violation and an infringement on media freedom.

"There is no guarantee the government won't do this again, but morally it's been proven that what they did was not right," Mr Ade Wahyudin, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, told Reuters, noting the government had 14 days to decide whether to appeal.

A presidential spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

In an interview with Reuters last year, Communications Minister Johnny G. Plate defended the move.

"When there's civil disobedience, that is not repressive," he said. "That is restoring the situation back to normal."

Reporting in Papua, where some have long advocated for independence from Indonesia, has been frequently restricted for the foreign media.

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