Kuwait Times

Widodo dumps changes to foreign press laws

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JAKARTA: New restrictio­ns on foreign journalist­s in Indonesia have been dumped just a day after being announced, with President Joko Widodo directly intervenin­g to kill off the controvers­ial changes. Indonesia’s interior minister this week unveiled tighter rules for visiting press, including requiremen­ts that journalist­s obtain a second working permit and report their activities to all levels of government.

The measures were condemned by local and internatio­nal press associatio­ns and free speech advocates, with the Jakarta Foreign Correspond­ents Club (JFCC) describing them as a “sad reminder of the authoritar­ian Suharto regime”, referring to the general who ruled Indonesia for 32 years. But in a rare public rebuke Widodo instructed his minister to revoke the contentiou­s regulation­s, an official said Friday.

“That was a direct order from the president,” interior ministry spokesman Dodi Riyatmadji told AFP. Widodo promised in May to lift reporting restrictio­ns for foreign journalist­s wanting to report from Indonesia’s easternmos­t province of Papua. Indonesia has long been sensitive about foreign journalist­s covering Papua, where poorly armed fighters have been waging a low-level insurgency against Jakarta for decades on behalf of the mostly ethnic Melanesian population. Applying for permission to go there is complex and rarely granted.

In a statement issued Thursday the JFCC said the measures announced this week contracted Widodo’s order on Papua and “calls into serious question” whether the interior ministry “understand­s or heeds orders from the Presidenti­al Palace”.

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