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Indonesian military steps up repression in West Papua
By John Roberts
8 June 2002
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A number of recent reports indicate that the Indonesian armed
forces (TNI) is preparing to intensify the crackdown on independence
supporters in the remote eastern province of West Papua. Pro-independence
and human rights groups claim that additional special forces troops
and Islamic militia groups are being moved into the province.
Australian academic Dr Greg Polgrain, who visited West Papua
in May, told the Sydney Morning Herald this month that
large groups of Laskar Jihad members were entering Papua every
week among the thousands of transmigrants from other areas of
Indonesia. This is being overseen and organised by the Indonesian
army. They are nearly all young men, not transmigration families...
Laskar Jihad are training with arms and that is pretty serious,
he said.
Laskar Jihad is one of the Islamic fundamentalist groups that
have been heavily involved in communal fighting in both the Malukus
and Sulawesi, which has cost thousands of lives over the past
two years. Close ties exist between the militia groups and sections
of the Indonesian military and police. The Sydney Morning Herald
reported that an additional 150 Kopassus special forces troops
had just been moved from Sumatra to bolster the army presence
in Papua.
The TNI, with the backing of President Megawati Sukarnoputri,
has resorted to increasingly repressive methods over the past
18 months to harass and intimidate opponents of continued Indonesian
rule over the province. The military and police maintain a de
facto curfew. Arbitrary arrest and detention is common and the
armed forces are directly implicated in several murders.
Martin Luther Wanma, a pastor from Sorong, stated in a letter
that a senior police officer had threatened to arrest him. The
main reason for my imminent arrest is my objection to the Laskar
Jihad coming to West Papua, he declared. According to the
Papuan human rights group Elsham, one man died in custody after
police rounded up and questioned people in Wamena who attended
meetings held by Amnesty International and the European Union
in January and March respectively.
The most blatant example was the killing of prominent independence
leader Theys Eluay last year. Eluay was chairman of the Papua
Presidium, which was formed in June 2000 after a government-sponsored
meeting of tribal leaders rejected Jakartas proposals for
greater autonomy and called for full independence. He and other
Presidium leaders were charged with subversion in
late 2000 but later released.
Eluay was murdered on the night of November 11 after dining
at the home of local Kopassus chief Colonel Hartomo, near the
provincial capital of Jayapura. His driver disappeared and has
not been seen since. Kopassus special forces were notorious during
the Suharto period for political murders and brutal operations
against separatist movements in East Timor and Aceh as well as
West Papua.
Such was the outrage over Eluays murder that the government
was compelled to launch a formal investigation. Last month an
11-man commission of inquiry brought down a report that pointed
to the involvement of Kopassus and led to the arrest of six men,
including Hartomo and his deputy Major Donny Hutabarat. The trial
is due to begin in two months.
The six, however, are simply convenient scapegoats. Given the
political implications of Eluays murder, it is highly unlikely
that Hartomo and Hutabarat would have acted without the direct
sanction of the army top brass. Phil Erari, one of the two native
Papuans on the inquiry, has already denounced the findings as
a cover-up for those who ordered the murder.
At the time, military officers brushed aside the murder, claiming
Eluays death was an accident or a heart attack.
Now the involvement of Kopassus has been established, military
commanders are seeking to distance themselves from the six. Commenting
on the arrests, TNI spokesman Major General Syafrie Syamsuddin
insisted that the motive for the murder was not yet clearthe
implication being that it was not political.
Neither the investigation nor the arrests have stopped the
army thuggery. According to a report in the Christian Science
Monitor on May 10, a key witness in the upcoming trial who
attended the same dinner as Eluay at Hartomos home, was
attacked and narrowly escaped death. The Papuan rights group Elsham
said the attacker was Kopassus Sergeant Yani.
US encourages Indonesian military
Two factors have contributed to the more aggressive role of
the Indonesian military, not only in West Papua but also against
the separatist movement in Aceh and throughout the country.
The first was the ousting of President Abdurrahman Wahid and
the installation of Megawati Sukarnoputri last year after a protracted
political brawl in which the generals played the role of kingmaker.
The TNI top brass now feels that it has an administration that
is not only beholden to it but supports its repression of separatist
movements. One of the main criticisms of Wahid was that his negotiations
with independence groups were paving the way for more East Timors
and the breakup of Indonesia.
The second is the US administrations determination to
reestablish close ties with the Indonesian military. In 1999,
in the aftermath of the TNIs involvement in atrocities in
East Timor, the US Congress imposed a ban on any links between
the US and Indonesian armed forces until such time as those responsible
were brought to justice. The Bush administration, however, has
repeatedly stated its intention to restore the ties with the TNI,
which, for more than three decades under Suharto, served Washingtons
interests in Indonesia and throughout the region.
A trial is currently underway in Jakarta of 18 soldiers and
civilians alleged to have been involved in the East Timor violence.
The legal process is a farce with the TNI top brass attending
the court and making public statements of support for the accused
in a crude attempt to intimidate the judges. As in the case of
Eluays murder, none of the top generals have been called
to account. Yet, the Bush administration has seized on the trial
to argue that, as US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld declared
recently, Indonesia was dealing with human rights issues
in an orderly, democratic way.
At an Asian security conference in Singapore in late May, Rumsfelds
deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, expressed the hope: Id like
to figure out ways in which we wouldnt always use, as the
means of expressing displeasure, isolating the Indonesian military
from contacts with the West and the United States. Answering
criticisms that Indonesia was slow in supporting the US war
against terrorism, he pointed out that the two countries
already have close security ties. The cooperation is really
very good, both with the CIA and FBI, he stated.
The Bush administration has all but openly repudiated the Congressional
ban. Since the terror attacks on New York on September 11, the
US has resumed non-lethal military sales to Indonesia,
obtained Congressional approval for an $US18 million anti-terrorist
training program mainly for Indonesia, and resumed regular contacts
between US and Indonesian military officials.
In a particularly sinister development, the Bush administration
has asked Congress for $8 million to train a security force for
peacekeeping operations inside Indonesia. In other
words, a special military force is to be established, outside
the control of the police, to suppress internal opposition, including
in West Papua.
These US moves will only encourage the TNI to take a more aggressive
stance and to dispense with the cosmetic reforms instituted
since the fall of the Suharto dictatorship.
See Also:
Why has South East Asia become
the second front in Bush's "war on terrorism"?
[26 April 2002]
West Papuan separatist
leader murdered in suspicious circumstances
[22 November 2001]
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