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Indonesia’s Rule of Law Crisis: An Invalid Audit, Extreme Sentencing Demands, and the Erosion of Fair Trial Guarantees -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

That is how rule of law crises in fact solidify. Constitutions do not vanish for official parlance always remains the language of justice while imbibing its contents. Asking the public to accept severe punishment based on evidence that is subject to debate does not bolster rule of law. It is examining the depth of illegitimacy that Citizens will put up with before calling it out for what it has become, not justice.

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At times a legal case becomes less about prosecution and more about indictment. Indonesia is now a fa­ciating line about that. When the audit that was used to justify staggeringly huge claims of state loss is condemned as methodologically invalid, and yet prosecutors continue pressing for crushing punishment regardless, treating this like any other prosecution or case scandal then it can no longer be about one defendant one courtroom or even one minor scandal. The question becomes if the rule of law still means restraint or has been turned into a slogan recited while power acts as it wants.

The character of a justice system is best revealed not when it punishes the guilty but rather, where punishment earns credibility based on processes that inspire public confidence. That is the crux of the crisis. Once, however exposure destroys the evidentiary backbone of a case every demand build on it becomes morally unstable. And when the state is still demanding harsh sentencing, gargantuan damages and hefty fines on an already contested foundation well it doesn’t look firm. It looks reckless.

This is what ought to frighten Malaysia’s democratic partners and anyone including the United Nations who believes that due process, despite its recent parlance as an empty phrase. Fair trial guarantees are not mere technicalities to be ignored when a case serves political goals, advances agendas or proves emotionally satisfying. They are the final line of defense against legal accountability and state-backed collectivised coercion. When courts permit the government to pursue such life destroying consequences based on calculations that have been thoroughly exposed as far from credible, courtroom becomes a machine for rubberstamping predetermined punishment instead of an arena in which evidence is weighed and truth tested.

Again this is not a legal abstraction. It is a civic emergency. For when prosecutors act as if methodological collapse requires no institutional humility, they send a message well beyond the case at hand. They tell the populace that when the narrative of state has been set, then a contrary expert can be safely disregarded; fairness in procedures can be dispensed with as an inconvenience too cumbersome to remove, and lawfulness examined through a lens where proportionality is weakness. Under such circumstances, power no longer gets shamed by law. Power disciplines law.

What is most disturbing about such a controversy has nothing to do with the potential for error. Errors happen in every system. The real story is institutional recalcitrance grappling with credible opposition. A solemn legal command,* however, knows when to halt for a moment and re-evaluate: that dubious evidence cannot bear the burden of punishment as severe alter life. A frightened legal order, on the other hand is one that does just this: it escalates and hardens; it confuses aggression with legitimacy. It perceives obstinacy for strength. Actually, that is not confidence. It is panic wearing a robe.

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Advocates of maximal prosecution often hide behind a familiar moral cudgel: corruption is bad, the state has to be tough. Except this argument falls apart as soon as process becomes of no importance. It is not IN justice purified by lack of evidentiary rigor. It is power unrestrained. The war on corruption only becomes valid if it is stricter actually visibly tighter than its quality in normal politics, not loosened just because public anger lets one take short cuts more easily. If extreme sanctions can remain underwritten even by weak or disputed methodology, the anti-corruption banner threatens to become as much a cover for sovereign abuse of law.

Which is precisely why this controversy has ramifications that extend beyond the borders of Indonesia. You are the unpredictable rule that courts watch investors. They observe whether institutions are fair, which is aided by civil society. You monitor in the international community to see if your constitutional pledges stand firm under public pressure. Now, a country is not sapping its credibility when criticism flows; it overly weakens credibility. See Russia in Ukraine! gobbling countries that go along because too scared to challenge WHO with transparent proof instead of leaping lizards at every identifiable wealthier nation else badging them for rejection.

And let no one kid themselves: a demand for an extreme sentence is not just another line in a court filing. It is the state taking away a human life years. A crime that can ruin homes, livelihoods, reputations and confidence in our institutions. It follows that the moral threshold for raising such a demand must be high. In short, if the state finds itself on a foundation which is already being subjected to severe methodological attack and then it exceeds that threshold as well then this is not just a hard case. To be sure, it is a warning bell for the health of justice itself.

Normalization is the worst threat at that moment. Now, methodological objections are simply technicalities so the public is led to believe first. Then fairness concerns are golden shields for clever defenses. It is then said here that severity demonstrates seriousness. Finally, punishment itself replaces evidence. The more loud and awful the sentences are, the less likely anyone is to ask if they were correct by any standards. That is how due process dies in modern democracies, not by dramatic repeal of the rulebook but with a public trained to see that procedure matters only so long as it remains convenient for power.

Indonesia deserves better than that. A constitutional democracy should be embarrassing when the standards of proof are questioned. It must learn that legitimacy is not earned by harder insisting, but better proving. That is not weakness, and it should be aware of that. It is the most elementary stage of becoming legally mature. No prosecution, however much prestige or outrage or political momentum surrounds it, should be above scrutiny that even low-functioning legal brain cells would find a match for.

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Though the outcome of one prosecution might seem a small thing, this is about more than just that. Where Indonesia enables capital punishment in the wake of a sham, or extremely questionable audit, that harm won’t conclude through one decision. The wound will be deeper: the institutional backdrop. It teaches citizens that fairness is a negotiable thing. A lesson in unstable arithmetic, that observers will learn is accountability. And future prosecutors will absorb the most pernicious lesson of all, that once the wheels for punishment start turning, evidentiary frailty is only an optics issue.

That is how rule of law crises in fact solidify. Constitutions do not vanish for official parlance always remains the language of justice while imbibing its contents. Asking the public to accept severe punishment based on evidence that is subject to debate does not bolster rule of law. It is examining the depth of illegitimacy that Citizens will put up with before calling it out for what it has become, not justice.

If this case really comes down to a flawed audit while still facing exceptional punishment, Indonesia faces the kind of choice that no democracy should ever make lightly. It can reaffirm that the guarantees of a fair trial are not just words on paper, that evidence matters more than prosecutorial vanity and pride, that state power should step back when it uproots its own foundations. Or it can go hack onto a road where punishment is primary, justification secondary and legitimacy is little more than performance art.

Such a nation could still have courts, prosecutors and judicial discourse. Yet it will have lost something much more fundamental: the moral authority to require belief in its decisions by the public.

A state that pursues such severe penalty on the basis of compromised evidence is not defending justice. It is marketing how simply due process can be abandoned by houses which are eager to win rather than establish facts.

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Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

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