Mochtar
Lubis was jailed by two
presidents, and his newspaper banned six times. From prison he
smuggled out letters, some of which were printed in IPI Report.
He is considered the doyen of the Indonesian press.
Known for his exposés of government corruption and inefficiency,
the legendary Indonesian editor Mochtar Lubis was jailed by two
presidents while his newspaper, the daily Indonesia Raya, was
banned six times. “Unable to report except accurately or
to comment except honestly, he was bound to get into trouble
with the despot Sukarno and the autocrat Suharto,” said
author and journalist Robert Elegant.
Lubis was first imprisoned in December 1956. As a result of
strong protests by the International Press Institute (IPI) among
others, he was transferred to house arrest in January 1957. However,
he was neither charged nor set free until April 1961. That year,
he was given a hero’s welcome at the IPI General Assembly
in Tel Aviv, where he attacked Sukarno’s treatment of the
press in a courageous speech.
On returning to Jakarta from Tel Aviv, Lubis was promptly arrested
and jailed. From a military prison in Madiun, hundreds of kilometers
from his Jakarta home, Lubis smuggled out occasional letters,
some of which were printed in IPI Report. After nine years in
prison, he wrote: “I am a stubborn old fool and am fully
convinced that our era is the era of human freedom and human cooperation
and not the era of human enslavement and inevitable confrontation.
... But only a truly free press can help build up traditions of
freedom, the respect of law, for public rights, for private rights,
to fight against the abuse of power, against corruption moral
and material.”
Lubis was freed after nearly 10 years in jail following the
overthrow of Sukarno. After his release, he revived Indonesia
Raya in 1968 and resumed his role in pointing out government
corruption. Lubis was soon to be in trouble again — this
time for exposing corruption in the new government and among
President Suharto’s family members. Along with many other
publications, Indonesia Raya was closed down for good after the
riots that accompanied the 1974 visit to Indonesia by the Prime
Minister of Japan, Kakuei Tanaka. A year later, in February 1975,
Lubis was again arrested. After weeks of interrogation by the
military, he was imprisoned on charges of sedition for allegedly
having mobilized students to demonstrate against the Japanese
prime minister’s visit. The international press came forcefully
to his defense, and he was released after two and a half months
in prison on April 15.
Mochtar Lubis was born on March 7, 1922. Before taking over
the editorship of Indonesia Raya in 1952, he worked as foreign
affairs editor of the Indonesian National News Agency, Antara,
from 1945 to 1952, and published the first English-language newspaper
in Indonesia, the Times of Indonesia, in 1952. In 1966, he founded
a cultural and literary monthly, Horison. A former member of
the IPI executive board and chairman of IPI’s National
Committee in Indonesia, he is also a renowned novelist, poet
and essayist.
Lubis's courage during the Sukarno and Suharto
years became a byword in Asia and wherever the press was under
attack. He was long ignored by the self-censoring media in his
own country because of his firm belief that universal human rights
should not be superseded by the notions of unity and nation-building.
However, he is today regarded by his countrymen as the doyen of
the Indonesian press and a symbol of courageous and independent
journalism.
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