Butt and Lindsey, ‘Judicial Mafia: The Courts and State Illegality in Indonesia’.
Cornell University Press, 1970) 185.
310
Simon Butt
the concept was used, or rather misused, almost exclusively as a political tool
during the Soekarno and Soeharto presidencies. Because no law or judicial
decision explained the Negara Hukum – and legal scholars were divided or
muted by the military – the regimes could interpret it to suit their own pur-
poses.
35
For example, Soekarno’s Old Order (Orde Lama) used the Negara
Hukum concept as a nation-building ideology, which gained strong popular
support because many Indonesians were optimistic for change after the long
revolution against the Dutch.
36
Yet Soekarno introduced policies and laws that
were contrary to the ‘rule of law’. For example, in 1964, he issued a decree that
purported to dissolve the separation of powers doctrine and allow the govern-
ment to directly interfere in judicial decision-making.
By contrast, Soeharto (1965–98) used the concept of Negara Hukum as
a legitimising tool – both to present himself as the legitimate successor to
Soekarno and to set his regime apart from Soeharto’s. According to Soeharto’s
government, Soekarno had failed to uphold the Negara Hukum, which caused
dire economic and social consequences.
37
The New Order promised to ‘con-
sistently and purely’ implement the 1945 Constitution, including the
Negara
Hukum, outlining the concept as follows:
1. legality, in the sense of law in all its forms;
2. a judiciary which is independent, impartial and free from the influence
of any other power in force; and
3. recognition and protection of fundamental rights, embodying equality
in politics, law, and in the social, economic, cultural and educational
spheres.
38
Ironically, though using the Negara Hukum to legitimise itself during its
early years, the New Order in practice became the very antithesis of the rule
of law, at least as understood in many Western countries. Contrary to Negara
Hukum ideals, the regime became highly repressive of its citizens and set-up
mechanisms to ensure that the government and military enjoyed virtual
35
T. Lubis, In Search of Human Rights: Legal–Political Dilemmas of Indonesia’s New Order,
1966–1990 (Jakarta: PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama in cooperation with SPES Foundation,
1993), 88.
36
D. S. Lev, ‘Judicial Authority and the Struggle for an Indonesian Rechtsstaat’ (1978) 13 Law
and Society Review 44.
37
See the Preamble (point 2) of MPR Decree No. XX/1966, which claims that divergence from
the 1945 Constitution partially caused the 1965 coup attempt.
38
As contained in the MPR’s first Five Year Development Plan (Rencana Pembangunan Lima
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