|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Indonesia
Singapore witnesses bolster flagging Jakarta terrorist trial
By John Roberts
8 July 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Three witnesses being held in custody in Singapore testified
via video link in the Jakarta trial of Islamic fundamentalist
cleric Abu Bakar Bashir on June 26. For the first time since the
proceedings began on April 23, the three men gave evidence linking
Bashir to the Jemaah Islamiah (JI) network, to terrorist bombings
of churches in Indonesia in 2000 and to an alleged plot to kill
Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri.
The testimony was politically convenient for the Indonesian
administration, which has been facing domestic criticism over
the political character of the trial, and for a number of foreign
governmentsthe US, Australia and Singaporethat have
been demanding a crackdown on JI and Bashir.
The Singapore witnesses provided a much-needed boost to what
was a flagging prosecution case. Previous witnesses, including
four of those facing trial over the Bali bombing, had failed to
definitively link Bashir to specific terrorist acts. But the conditions
under which the three Singapore prisoners are being held raises
doubts, to say the least, about the veracity of their statements.
The 64-year-old Bashir was first detained last October on the
basis of draconian anti-terrorist laws rushed into effect by Megawati
after the Bali bombing. Despite the lack of any evidence, Jakarta
was under intense international pressure to act against Bashir.
In the end, however, he was not charged over the Bali blasts but
over other terrorist attacks. Bashir has denied all charges, and
that the JI even exists as an organisation.
Singaporean authorities tightly controlled the testimony of
the three prisoners. They gave evidence from a special studio
in an empty government building in Singapore and technicians were
sent to Jakarta to set up the equipment in the court.
Bashirs team of defence lawyers walked out of the courtroom
in protest. They insisted that Indonesian law did not allow testimony
from witnesses not present in court and that it was questionable
whether the three could testify without fear and intimidation.
Denied permission to leave the court, Bashir read a book and refused
to answer any of the judges questions.
The main witness was Malaysian national Faiz bin Abu Bakar
Bafana, who claimed to be the treasurer for the JI group responsible
for Singapore and Malaysia. Like the other two witnesses, Bafana
has been held without trial with 12 others under Singapores
notorious Internal Security Act (ISA) since his arrest in December
2001. Their appearance was the first time any of the three had
been seen in public since their arrest.
Bafana claimed that he had often met Bashir and that Bashir
had been present at his swearing into JI in 1986. He claimed that
Bashir had been involved in discussions on terrorist attacks and
in the organisation of JI during four meetings in Central Java
between 1999 and 2001.
Asked if Bashir had specifically approved bomb operations,
Bafana answered: Yes, twice, the Christmas bombings and
the Atrium (a Jakarta plaza) bomb. He added: But the
preacher did not ask us to do it, he only suggested the targets
were in line with the objectives, not ordinary people.
Bafana also claimed that Bashir had been present at a meeting
where the assassination of Megawati was discussed and that he
had been involved in sending militia to take part in communal
fighting in the Malukus.
The two other witnesses, Hashim bin Abas and Jaafar Mistuki,
both Singapore nationals, gave briefer testimony and were less
specific about particular activities. Both claimed that Bashir
was the head of JI and called on him to admit his involvement.
Mistuki outlined his role in a bombing attack in Batam in December
2000, allegedly organised by JIs supposed head of operations,
Hambali. He insisted that it would be impossible for
Bashir not to have known about the mission. In similar vein, Abas
said all decisions made in JI required the approval of its leader,
just like in the military.
No credible explanation was provided as to why the three had
decided to give evidence against the man they claim to have been
their former leader. It certainly cannot be excluded that they
were subject to intense interrogation, even torture, or a variety
of threats against themselves and their family and friends. Nor
can it be ruled out that they struck a deal with Singaporean authorities
in return for an end to their indefinite detention without trial.
The abject apologies offered by the three tend to undermine
claims that their testimony was uncoerced. Abas concluded his
testimony by declaring: I want to apologise to the government
of Indonesia for all the misdeeds of the JI... I also want the
government to stop the activities of JI so that there will be
no more victims. That is my request. Thank you.
Bafana urged JI members to give themselves up and praised his
treatment in Singapore. I am sure the authorities will treat
them in a dignified way, as I have been treated. I was actually
surprised at the treatment I received. They respect me and they
want to solve the problems, he said.
If this testimony was not coerced, then the obvious question
remains: why werent the prisoners transported to Jakarta
to give their evidence in open court?
According to the Singapore police, Bafana confessed last September,
nine months after his arrest. However, even prior to this confession,
Singapore was putting pressure on Jakarta to arrest Bashir, claiming
that the 13 men held for their alleged involvement in terrorist
plots had already implicated him. Indonesian police, who went
to Singapore and interviewed the men, insisted that there was
not sufficient evidence to arrest Bashir.
It is not surprising that the international media outlets seized
on Bafanas testimony as a long-awaited breakthrough
in the Bashir trial. Bafanas statements mesh neatly with
the claims of Washington and Canberra that Bashir heads JI and
that JI is a tightly controlled terrorist network throughout South
East Asia with links to Al Qaeda. Both the Bush administration
and the Howard government have used these unsubstantiated allegations
to justify the global war on terrorism, which has
included the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.
Moreover, the trials of Bashir and those accused of the Bali
bombing have coincided with the Australian governments passing
of legislation providing the domestic spy agency, the Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation, with unprecedented police
state powers of detention and interrogation without trial.
The latest testimony has proven a boon to the Indonesian government,
which has been under pressure from Muslim organisations over the
trial. Hasyim Muzadi, the leader of Indonesias largest Muslim
body Nahdlatul Ulama, told the press that the new evidence undermined
Bashirs claim to innocence. A cleric connected to the second
largest organisation, Muhammadiyah, is quoted as saying that Bashir
does not have a strong case.
Some political analysts have raised doubts about the worth
of the Singapore witnesses. In an interview with Radio Singapore
International, Areif Budiman, head of Indonesian Studies at the
University of Melbourne, said he did not think the new testimony
strengthened the case against Bashir. He described JI as a loose
movement rather than an organisation, adding that
its difficult to say that Abu Bakar Bashir was the chairperson
of JI, or was elected or was appointed by somebody. That kind
of thing doesnt exist, I think.
Last December the Brussels-based International Crisis Group
(ICG) issued a backgrounder on JI which also noted
the rather loose character of the organisation. It found that
a deep rift existed between Bashir and JI members in Malaysia
who considered he was not radical enough. The ICG concluded that
Bashir may be lying about any involvement in JI, but he
is unlikely to have been the mastermind of JI attacks. The
report also pointed to an apparent Indonesian military link to
Acehnese involved in the Medan bombing in Christmas 2000 and called
for it to be investigated.
The exact role of Bashir and the character of JI are yet to
be determined. But the police, the prosecution and the courts
are making sure that the investigation and trial remain as narrowly
focused as possible. Broader questions about links to other organisations
and bodies, including the Indonesian military and police, which
have a proven track record of state-orchestrated terrorism, remain
strictly off limits. All of this underscores the highly political
character of the trial in which Jakarta, as well as the US, Australia
and Singapore governments, have a major political stake.
See Also:
Indonesian prosecutors attempt
to link Muslim cleric to terror network
[13 June 2003]
Trial of Islamic cleric accused
of terrorism begins in Jakarta
24 April 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |