Yasonna Hamonangan Laoly (born 27 May 1953) is the former Minister of Law and Human Rights of Indonesia,Fadli, Minister postpones lease fee increases in Batam . Jakarta Post, 16 November 2016. Accessed 24 November 2016. Official Profile at the Ministry website. Accessed 24 November 2016. serving from 2019 to 2024. He was a member of the North Sumatra regional legislature from 1999 to 2003 and of the People's Consultative Assembly from 2004 to 2014. He is the first Nias people to hold a cabinet position. He is one of the leaders on the central executive board of the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle.
Before studying law at the University of North Sumatra, Yasonna was planning to become a priest.
Yasonna is proud of his Nias heritage, and once wore a traditional Nias war dress to an Indonesian independence parade. His selection as a cabinet minister was greeted with enthusiasm by fellow ethnic Nias.
After graduation, he worked as a lawyer and later joined HKBP Nommensen University as a lecturer in its newly established Faculty of Law. From that position, he earned a scholarship to study law abroad, first at Virginia Commonwealth University and later for his doctorate at North Carolina State University.
Following the fall of Suharto in 1998, Yasonna turned to politics, first as a member of the North Sumatra Provincial Assembly and later of the People's Representative Council representing the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) Following the 2014 election of fellow PDI-P member Joko Widodo as president, Laoly was selected as a member of Widodo's Working Cabinet.
In this position, he helped President Joko Widodo draft the Government Law on Mass Organizations (known in Indonesia by its abbreviation, "Perppu Ormas"), which banned Hizbut Tahrir, an organization that seeks to establish a caliphate in Indonesia. The law provoked several demonstrations by HTI's members and sympathizers, and litigation in the Constitutional Court of Indonesia.
In response to criticism of overcrowding and poor conditions in prisons, he said the problems were caused by a lack of personnel and high land prices, which hampered the construction of new prisons.
In 2017, Yasonna announced the creation of a National Harmony Council which would use non-judicial mechanisms to deal with past human rights abuses, prompting criticism this would restrict justice for victims and their families.
In 2019, Yasonna was criticized for publicly endorsing the Criminal Code bill, which would criminalize criticism of the president and vice president, and criminalize sex outside marriage. He was also criticized for his support for revisions to the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) Law, which was seen as undermining KPK's powers. Yasonna was a member of the government team that drafted the Criminal Code bill, and he represented the government in parliamentary hearings on the amended KPK Law. Following the criticism, Yasonna on 1 October 2019 resigned from his ministerial position, deciding to take a seat he had won in the House of Representatives in the April 2019 general election. However, on 23 October 2019, President Widodo re-appointed Yasonna as minister of justice and human rights for a second period, causing Yasonna to resign from the House of Representatives.
He has been criticized for recognizing pro-government factions in political parties riven by leadership disputes.
|
|