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FBI dispatched to Indonesia to deal with Freeport murders
By John Roberts
24 January 2003
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After inconclusive Indonesian investigations into an ambush
near the Freeport mine in West Papua last year, a team of US FBI
investigators is due to arrive this week to take part in a joint
inquiry. Two American teachers and an Indonesian died in the attack
and 12 others were injured. The evidence so far points to the
involvement of officers of the Indonesian armed forces (TNI) in
West Papua and possibly at higher levels in Jakarta.
President George Bush phoned his Indonesian counterpart, Megawati
Sukarnoputri, last month to insist that Indonesian authorities
bring those responsible for the Freeport attack to justice and
to formally request a joint investigation. Bush reportedly told
Megawati that any resumption of ties between the Pentagon and
the TNI was contingent on the FBI probe.
Bushs direct involvement indicates that far more is at
stake than the tracking down of the Freeport killers. The unresolved
murder of two US citizens and open questions about the TNIs
role threaten to become a festering sore that will undermine broader
US interests. In particular, the Bush administration has been
pushing for the lifting of a Congressional ban imposed on contact
between the US and Indonesian military, following TNI-organised
militia violence on East Timor in 1999.
The first test of the ban is an appropriations bill for $400,000
to fund training for the Indonesian military under the International
Military Education and Training Program, which Congress is due
to vote on before the end of January. In arguing for the ban to
be lifted, the Bush administration will no doubt point to the
outcome of trials in Jakarta, which, even though a transparent
whitewash, have resulted in a handful of convictions over the
East Timor violence.
The dispatch of a FBI team to West Papua is to quiet Congressional
concerns over the Freeport murders. The move is not without its
political risks if the investigation comes to be seen as an obvious
cover-up. Former US State Department official Ed McWilliams is
reported by Asia Times Online as warning that if the White
House agrees to a face-saving ploy by blaming rogue
army officers then were essentially conspiring in
a cover-up to prevent full accountability by people responsible
for the murder of US citizens.
The ambush took place on an isolated road near the Freeport
mine on August 31. While the military blamed local separatist
guerrillas for the attack, the character of the attack involving
the use of automatic weapons immediately cast suspicion on the
TNI. The Free Papua Movement (OPM) rarely has access to sophisticated
weapons and has never carried out an attack on foreign workers
in West Papua. The army, on the other hand, is notorious for its
protection rackets and other illegal activities in the province.
For four months, two separate inquiries by the TNI and the
national police have failed to produce a single suspect. The police
claim that their inquiry has bogged down because they have been
prevented from interviewing TNI officers suspected of involvement.
FBI officials have visited Papua twice to check on the progress
of the investigation and are preparing their own initial report.
Already, the police have evidence that implicates the TNIs
Kopassus special forces in the murders.
* The TNI at first claimed to have shot dead a Papuan, Danianus
Waker, who was said to have been involved in the Freeport ambush.
An autopsy showed that Waker died 24 hours prior to the attack
and, in any case, had a medical condition that would have prevented
him walking into the area.
* Shortly afterward, police interviewed another Papuan who
had been a member of the Kopassus-operated Tenaga Bantuan Operasi
militia. He said he had accompanied nine Kopassus soldiers to
near the scene of the shooting. He remained with four of them
while the remainder moved off toward the area of the ambush. The
informant heard shooting over a mobile phone during communication
between the two groups of soldiers. He told police he was sure
the Kopassus soldiers had ambushed the Freeport convoy.
* In early November, the Washington Post and Sydney
Morning Herald published separate articles, citing intelligence
sources who claimed that the top levels of the military in Jakarta
had prior knowledge of an operation against the Freeport mine.
TNI chief General Endriartono Sutarto, who was among those named,
denied the allegation and took legal action against the Washington
Post.
* In late December, deputy Papuan police chief Brigadier-General
Raziman Tarigan told the media that forensic tests on ammunition
used in the mine ambush had come from an M-16, an SS-1 rifle and
a Mauser rifle. While not claiming that the TNIs Kostrad
strategic reserve division was involved, he said: What is
clear is that these weapons are used by Kostrad in the area.
There are also indications that the army may be involved in
trying to intimidate witnesses and others with information about
the Freeport ambush. On December 28, the day after Jakarta first
foreshadowed direct FBI involvement in the inquiry, two women
were seriously wounded in a gun attack on a mini-bus carrying
eight people in Wutung, 50 kilometers from the border with Papua
New Guinea.
One of those shot was Elsye Rumbiak Bonai, wife of the head
of the Institute for Human Rights Study and Advocacy (IHRSA),
Johannes Bonai. His group has been prominent in accusing the TNI
of carrying out the Freeport ambush. Its own investigation produced
the former Tenaga Bantuan Operasi witness who saw military officers
in the Freeport area at the time of the August 31 attack.
Local military commander Colonel Agus Mulyadi blamed the Wutung
shooting on separatist rebels. However, IHRSA deputy head, Aloysius
Renwarin, said IHRSA members had received threatening phone calls
and were being targetted because of its investigations into the
military. Like the ambush at the Freeport mine, the Wutung attack
occurred only a short distance from a military post. Over 40 rounds
were fired, indicating that the attackers were well armed.
The military has a long history of dirty work in Papua. Earlier
this month, seven Kopassus soldiers charged with murdering Papuan
Council Presidium chairman Theys Eluay in November 2001 went on
trial. According to the military prosecutor, Eluay was killed
on the orders of Lieutenant-Colonel Hartomo after the Papuan politician
denounced as inadequate government proposals for limited autonomy
for Papua.
The TNI has a number of motives for the Freeport attack. In
Papua itself, local commanders have been involved in business
operations, both legal and illegal. The military receives a reported
$11 million a year from the operators of the Freeport mine in
return for protection. The attack may simply have been a timely
reminder to the company to continue its payments.
It is also possible, however, that plans at the local level
dovetailed with the scheming of those further up the chain of
command, who were looking for a means of branding the OPM as a
terrorist organisation and enlisting the US in suppressing
separatist activity in the resource-rich province. If the OPM
could be tarred with the murder of American citizens, it would
provide a means, albeit a highly risky one, for achieving that
end.
The FBI now enters this political minefield as part of a joint
investigation. Its mission statement is clear: lay the murders
to rest, without implicating the military top brass and thus complicating
the reestablishment of close US-Indonesian military ties. Whether
it is capable of carrying out the task, without the cover-up being
too blatant, remains to be seen.
See Also:
Washington and Canberra
cover up Indonesian military connection to Papua killings
[8 November 2002]
Further indications
of Indonesian military involvement in Papuan mine murders
[15 October 2002]
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