Control the 2 Ton of Opium Case, Commission III of the DPR reminds the ABK Fandi Ramadan Law Enforcement Agency
JAKARTA - Member of Commission III of the Indonesian House of Representatives, Hasbiallah Ilyas, warns that the legal process against Fandi Ramadan, a Seafarer (ABK) who is threatened with the death penalty in the case of alleged smuggling of 2 tons of methamphetamine, should be transparent and professional. He also reminded that there was no practice of "legal games" or engineering in handling the big case.
"We ask that there be no playing of law enforcement officers in this case," said Hasbiallah, Friday, February 27.
It is known that Commission III of the DPR will monitor this case after Fandi's family came to the DPR yesterday. The PKB legislator asked that the law enforcement officers who handle this case be immediately summoned to Senayan to provide an explanation publicly to the public.
"The PKB faction requests that the officers handling this case be summoned to the Commission III of the DPR RI to be asked for an explanation in public. We need to know in full what actually happened," said Hasbiallah.
He said that the summons was part of the DPR's oversight function to ensure that the principle of due process of law was met. Given that Fandi faces the death penalty, according to Hasbi, the state is obliged to ensure that the investigation and trial process is objective and free from criminalization efforts.
"We want to ensure that there are no violations of procedures and no engineering. If it is guilty, of course it must be processed according to law. But if there are strange things, the state must be present to straighten it out," he said.
Furthermore, the member of the legal commission expressed his support for eradicating narcotics without compromise. However, Hasbi reminded that every step of law enforcement must be based on the applicable legal corridor and in line with the spirit of the new Criminal Code.
"Transparency is very important because this case involves very serious legal and humanitarian consequences. Do not let law enforcement hurt the sense of justice itself," he concluded.