Suryono Explained

Suryono
Office:Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Indonesia
Term Start1:1994
Term End1:1996
Nominator1:Suharto
Predecessor1:Purwoto Gandasubrata
Successor1:Sarwata bin Kertotenoyo
Birth Date:22 October 1931
Citizenship:Indonesian

Suryono, also spelled Soerjono, was the ninth Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Indonesia.[1] The reputation of the Supreme Court among legal scholars suffered under his tenure due to Suryono's tendency to reverse seemingly final decisions via what were derisively termed "magic memos,"[2] and he was generally regarded as a candidate who would maintain the Supreme Court's subordination to the executive branch.[3] He overturned an administrative court ruling that had lifted a New Order-era ban on Tempo, a popular political commentary magazine.[2] [4]

Suryono fell into heavy conflict with former Supreme Court justice and Trisakti University Dean of Law, Adi Andojo. In April 1996, Andojo wrote to Attorney General of Indonesia Singgih that the Supreme Court had accepted bribes from wealthy businessmen in several cases; Suryono refused to back down when the letter was leaked to the press.[5] [6] Suryono denounced Andojo, who joined the Court in 1981 and made a career of exposing "court mafia,"[5] and encouraged President Suharto to dismiss him. Though a dismissal never occurred, then Minister of Justice Oetojo Oesman launched an investigation of the Supreme Court led by the Court itself;[6] the Court found no evidence of wrongdoing.[5] Though Suharto didn't accede to Suryono's demands for Andojo's dismissal, he did appoint Sarwata bin Kertotenoyo as Suryono's successor - only a few years after Kertotenoyo led the Supreme Court investigation that found no wrongdoing on its own part.[5] Suryono's attack on Andojo made a national hero of the latter after a gag order issued by the former led to opposition protests by students and legal professionals.[6]

With daily protests on the front steps of the Supreme Court, he made a habit of quietly exiting the building through the back door.[7] Suryono himself took a dim view of the judiciary of Indonesia, stating after his retirement that up to half of all judges were corrupt.[8]

Notes and References

  1. Daniel S. Lev, "The Crimes of Procedure." Taken from Figures of Criminality in Indonesia, the Philippines, and Colonial Vietnam, pg. 191. Ed. Vicente L. Rafael. Ithaca: SEAP Publications, 1999.
  2. David Bourchier, "Politics of Law in Contemporary Indonesia." Taken from Law, Capitalism and Power in Asia: The Rule of Law and Legal Institutions, pg. 246. Ed. Kanishka Jayasuriya. Abingdon-on-Thames: Routledge, 2006.
  3. Sebastian Pompe, The Indonesian Supreme Court: A Study of Institutional Collapse, pg. 158. Ithaca: SEAP Publications, 2005.
  4. Adriaan Bedner, Administrative Courts in Indonesia: A Socio-legal Study, pg. 180. Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2001.
  5. David Bourchier, Law, Capitalism and Power in Asia, pg. 247.
  6. Sebastian Pompe, The Indonesian Supreme Court, pg. 160.
  7. Sebastian Pompe, The Indonesian Supreme Court, pg. 165.
  8. Simon Butt, Rosemary Lyster, and Tim Stephens. Climate Change and Forest Governance: Lessons from Indonesia, pg. 131. Abingdon-on-Thames: Routledge, 2015.