The Star Malaysia

Beefing up terror laws

Indonesia’s parliament unanimousl­y passes new Bill after it was spurred into action by recent bombings that involved children as perpetrato­rs.

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s parliament unanimousl­y approved a tougher anti- terrorism law lengthenin­g detention periods and involving the military in counter- terrorism policing, spurred into action by recent bombings that involved children as perpetrato­rs.

Rights groups have criticised the revisions as overly broad and vague and warned against rushing them into law.

The scope for the military to become involved in counterter­rorism operations is contentiou­s because it backtracks on two decades of keeping soldiers out of areas under civilian authority.

President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo had threatened to impose the changes by special decree if parliament didn’t rapidly approve them. Changes were first proposed after a January 2016 suicide bombing and gun attack in Jakarta but languished in the legislatur­e.

Parliament deputy Speaker Agus Hermanto, who presided over the plenary session yesterday, asked members of the House: “Let us ask all factions. Do we agree to ratify the anti-terror Bill?” In acclamatio­n, they said they agreed.

The new law allows the authoritie­s to hold anyone suspected of planning a terror attack without charge for up to 21 days.

The move extends the current seven-day maximum.

In the past, this seven-day limit had forced police investigat­ors to release suspects while they were still attempting to build a case and gather evidence to prosecute ahead of a definitive detention.

The definitive detention is extended from 180 days to 290, of which 200 will be allocated for police investigat­ors to prepare an investigat­ion dossier and 90 for state prosecutor­s to prepare an indictment to be tabled to court.

Its deliberati­on was hastened after the coordinate­d suicide bombings of three churches in Surabaya, East Java, on May 14, which killed 12 people.

The new law penalises anyone who is a member of any group declared by a court as a terrorist organisati­on, even if the person has not committed a concrete act of planning or launched an attack.

This stipulatio­n would allow police to act pre-emptively before an attack is carried out.

“Anyone being a member or anyone recruiting others to be members ... may face a minimum two years and maximum seven years of jail term,” according to the new law.

“Founders, leaders, officials, or anyone controllin­g the organisati­on face a minimum three and maximum 12 years.” — The Straits Times/Asia News Network/ AP

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