JakartaPost-Mar 1
The Constitutional Court dismissed on Tuesday a request to revoke controversial provisions in the new penal code that make insulting the government and a sitting president a crime, saying that the petition was premature and petitioners lacked standing to pursue the case. The nine-member bench said the provisions in question had not been in effect when two lecturers, a student and a content creator filed their motion in January, days after President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo signed the revised Criminal Code, which was passed by the House of Representatives in December 2022. The new code stipulates that it will take effect three years after its Jan. 2 enactment. “The petitioners had no legal standing. Even if the petitioners had legal standing, their petition was premature,” chief justice Anwar Usman read out the decision on Tuesday. “Therefore, the court decides not to process the case any longer.” The petitioners requested the court to annul Articles 218 and 219, which stipulate a punishment of up to three years for insulting a sitting president and up to four years if the offense is committed using a technological device. The petitioners feared that the insertion of the once repealed provisions in the new penal code could be used to criminalize critics. Read more ate: https://www.thejakartapost.com/paper/2023/03/01/top-court-dismisses-petition-to-repeal-lse-majest-rules.html.