A former employee of Indonesia’s national airline has been jailed for one year after being found guilty of assisting in the
in-flight murder of a human rights activist.
Indonesia’s supreme court sentenced Rohainil Aini, a secretary overseeing pilot schedules for Garuda Indonesia airways at the time
of the killing, on Thursday.
Aini was convicted of forging documents that enabled an off-duty pilot to poison Munir Thalib, a prominent rights campaigner, on a
Garuda Indonesia flight to Amsterdam in 2004.
The former airline secretary is the third person to be tried in connection with Thalib’s murder.
Pollycarpus Priyanto, a former Garuda Indonesia pilot, is serving a 20-year jail term after he was convicted of poisoning Thalib in
January last year.
Intelligence chief acquitted
Major General Muchdi Purwoprandjono, a former deputy chief of the State Intelligence Agency, was also prosecuted on charges of
plotting the killing.
Purwoprandjono was acquitted by a different court, although lawyers have appealed against the ruling.
The high-profile trial is viewed as a test of how far the southeast Asian country judicial system has progressed since introducing
civilian rule in 1998.
Indonesia was ruled by a military government for 32 years until the death of President Suharto paved the way for democratic
elections.
However, the country is struggling to build an independent judiciary and Thalib had exposed a string of incidents involving
military abuse during Suharto’s time in power.
A 2005 presidential fact-finding investigation concluded that the state was most likely behind the killing, but its recommendations
for a full inquiry were dismissed.
Indonesian ex-airline worker jailed
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