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: Indonesia
Further indications of Indonesian military involvement in
Papuan mine murders
By John Roberts
15 October 2002
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In the six weeks since the murder of two American teachers
and one Indonesian employee of the international school at the
US-owned Freeport gold and copper mine in the Indonesian province
of Papua, further evidence has emerged pointing to the involvement
of the Indonesian military (TNI).
The attack on August 31, which also wounded 10 others, occurred
on a misty mountain road about 20 kilometres from the mine and
only a few hundred metres from an army security post. Gunmen armed
with M-16 rifles opened fire on three four-wheel drive vehicles
early in the afternoon. The ambush was immediately denounced by
the US Embassy in Jakarta as an outrageous act of terrorism.
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents have flown to Papua
after interviewing injured survivors in Australia as part of a
US inquiry into the incident.
Indonesian authorities at first blamed local villagers or separatist
guerrillas fighting for the separatist Free Papua Movement (OPM).
Later they accused two OPM splinter groups of being responsible.
The TNI commander in Papua, Major General Mahidin Simbolon, continues
to maintain that the OPM carried out the attack.
From the start, the TNIs claims have been questioned.
No OPM group was operating close to the site of the ambush, nor
does the organisation have any history of attacking foreigners.
The OPM is not well-armed and has been forced in the past to resort
to bows and arrows. One of the security personnel investigating
the ambush told Reuters that even an initial investigation virtually
ruled out the poorly-equipped separatists: If we look at
OPM, its not possible, because from the assault some 200
bullets hit the vehicles.
Local Papuan organisations and human rights groups have rejected
claims of OPM involvement. They have accused the TNI of attempting
to paint the OPM as terrorist, as part of a stepped-up
military campaign against the organisation over the last year.
The case against the OPM was so tenuous that in early September
the local police informed the media they had begun investigating
possible military involvement. The TNI has a history of using
security incidents to extract money from foreign-based companies
for providing protection for their enterprises. After major riots
against the mines operations in 1996, the Indonesian military
pressured the mines operators, Freeport-McMoran, to build
a new base for the TNI, at a cost of $US37 million.
New facts, reported over the past few weeks in the Washington
Post, cast further suspicion on the TNI. On September
1, the day after the incident, the military claimed to have killed
a Papuan guerrilla in a confrontation near the scene. This appeared
to give credence to the TNIs claim that an armed group was
operating near the ambush site.
According to the Papua-based Institute for Human Rights Study
and Advocacy, however, relatives identified the dead man as 24-year-old
Danianus Waker. He had been employed by the Indonesian Special
Forces (Kopassus) as an informer.
An autopsy raised even more questions. Regional police chief
I. Made Pastika told the press that the examination found Waker
had had a chronic disease for at least a year, which produced
a massive enlargement of the testicles. It would have been physically
impossible for him to carry out guerrilla activity or trek the
100 kilometres from his tribal area without transport.
The autopsy found that the bullet wounds in Wakers body
had occurred at least 24 hours prior to when the military claim
he was shot. Pastika also reported that soldiers had deliberately
smudged fingerprints and moved bodies on August 31 at the scene
of the ambush, thus corrupting crucial evidence.
On September 27, the Washington Post reported the allegations
of a 23-year-old Papuan who said that on the day of the incident
he was ordered by a Kopassus commander to accompany his squad
of nine soldiers from the town of Timika to Tembagapura, a town
near the Freeport mine. He was left with four soldiers on the
outskirts of the town, while the others continued on.
The informant told the Washington Post that the soldiers
started to ply him with whisky and beer and all five became drunk.
He claims to have overheard a mobile phone call from the commander
telling his men to get ready, followed by audible gunfire. When
the other squad members returned, the vehicle was driven by the
commander, who ordered them to get in quickly as they had to leave
the area.
The man told the newspaper that he was 100 percent sure
that the Kopassus soldiers had ambushed the Freeport convoy. The
journalists were told by a former senior US Embassy official not
to discount the mans story because of drunkenness as the
TNI would often use drugs or alcohol to get people in a
pliable mood, to counter the possibility of any resistance at
the last minute to what they want them to do.
Police chief Pastika said that the informant had come forward
as he feared for his life and was now under police protection
in the provincial capital Jayapura. He had been a member of the
Kopassus-trained Tenaga Bantuan Operasi militia for 11 years and
had previously participated in several Kopassus operations. The
informant has been interviewed by human rights activists who found
his account credible.
While the police claim there are discrepancies between the
militiamans account and what was found at the scene, they
are now questioning 19 soldiers from the Kopassus 515 battalion
who were stationed in the area at the time of the ambush. At this
stage the case seems to be broadly similar to the assassination
of pro-independence Papua Presidium Council president Theys Eluay
last November. After accusing Papuans of the murder, the authorities
eventually charged the local Kopassus commander and 11 of his
men.
If the TNI was responsible, it has no lack of motives. The
Indonesian military is currently the subject of US congressional
bans on assistance. Both the Indonesian government and the Bush
administration have been pushing for these to be lifted so that
the US and the TNI can collaborate more closely in a crackdown
on alleged Muslim extremists in South East Asia. An attack on
US citizens would reinforce the argument for cooperationif
it could be sheeted home to the OPM.
The TNI would also be able to push for the OPM to be included
on the US list of terrorist organisations, giving
a green light for escalating military repression in Papua. The
military played a major role in ousting former president Abdurrahman
Wahid last year, after he attempted to reach a compromise with
separatists in West Papua and Aceh. When Megawati Sukarnoputri
assumed the presidency, she signalled a tougher stance against
the Papuan separatists by appointing Major General Simbolon, a
former commander in East Timor, as the TNI chief in Papua.
Police chief Pastika indicated that elements of the army were
disgruntled over Freeports remuneration arrangements for
providing security at the mine. The money is vital for both the
police and TNI as the state budget provides less than half the
funds required. For decades, the TNI has been engaged in legal
business operations and is widely accused of being involved in
illegal rackets including extracting protection money, drug-running
and prostitution.
Under Suharto, the police were part of the military but, following
his fall in 1998, have been established as an autonomous body.
There are signs of increasingly bitter rivalry over state funding
and other sources of money. On September 29, TNI soldiers attacked
a police station in Binjai on the island of Sumatra after police
refused to release a soldier charged with drug dealing. Animosity
between the two arms of the Indonesian state may well be a factor
in the willingness of the police to push for an investigation
of the militarys role in the Freeport ambush.
Whatever happened on the mountain road in Papua on August 31,
the least likely explanation is that provided by the militarythose
responsible for providing security at the Freeport mine. The weight
of evidence is increasingly pointing to their involvement.
See Also:
Washington seizes on Bali terror bombing
to demand crackdown in Indonesia
[14 October 2002]
Ambush near US-owned mine
in Papua suggests Indonesian army involvement
[13 September 2002]
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