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Indonesia: Trials underway into Suharto-era atrocities
By John Roberts
24 November 2003
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Four trials have begun of 14 current and retired members of
Indonesias armed forces (TNI) for a massacre carried out
nearly 20 years ago, on September 12, 1984. Evidence emerging
in the courts has the potential of becoming a political embarrassment,
not only for the regime of President Megawati Sukarnoputri, who
is closely aligned with the military, but with the American and
Australian governments, both of which have moved to re-establish
close ties with the TNI.
The military officers have been charged over the murder of
Muslim civilians at the impoverished north Jakarta port area of
Tanjung Priok. Apart from military operations against separatists
in Aceh, West Papua and East Timor, the Tanjung Priok massacre
was the most infamous and bloody in the era of the Suharto dictatorship,
which came to power following the CIA-backed coup of 1965-1966
that left more than half a million Indonesians dead.
At the time of the atrocity, military authorities claimed 16
people had been killed after an unruly mob of Muslim protestors
attacked troops and state property. Families and eyewitnesses,
however, have consistently maintained that up to 400 people were
slaughtered when troops fired on a peaceful protest without warning.
They insist that bodies were dumped all over the Jakarta region.
The incident occurred in a period when Suharto was becoming
increasingly worried that right-wing Islamic organisations were
emerging as vehicles for political opposition to the government.
While his regime had previously worked with such layers in its
anti-communist killing sprees, rifts began developing when Suharto
refused to acquiesce to their demands for sharia law and an Islamic
state. By the late 1970s, crackdowns had begun, targetting opposition
organised through mosques and Islamic centres.
The most significant accused in the Tanjung Priok killings
is Major General Sriyanto Muntrasam, current commander of the
TNIs Special ForcesKopassus. He has been charged with
failing in his responsibility as captain to prevent his men from
firing on several thousand demonstrators.
Two retired major generals, a captain and 10 subordinates face
charges in three other trials. The junior officer, Sustrisno Mascung
has been charged, along with his men, of carrying out the shootings,
while one of the retired generals, Pranowo, faces charges over
the handling of the prisoners taken on that day. The first trial
began in mid-September, when the chairman of the panel of civilian
judges, Andi Samsan Nganro, declared they should be concluded
in 180 days.
Until now, the militarys 1984 account of what happened
has remained the official version. Even after the fall of the
Suharto dictatorship in 1998, Indonesian authorities continued
to do their utmost to prevent the truth from coming to light.
In 2001, however, in response to international demands in the
wake of the 1999 massacres in East Timor, legislation was passed
providing for special human rights courts to investigate abuses
by the military. In 2002 and 2003, convictions were handed down
to 6 of 18 officers charged with human right abuses over the TNI-organised
killings in East Timor. But, under intense pressure from the military,
the courts imposed only token sentences. The real culprits behind
the violencea number of high-ranking officers in Jakarta
were never even charged.
The current trials are only the second to be convened under
the human rights law. Their origin lies in a report handed to
former president Abdurrahman Wahid in July 2000 by the National
Human Rights Commission, Komisi Nasional Hak Asasi Manusia (KOMNAS
HAM). Suharto created KOMNAS in June 1993 as a result of widespread
international pressure in the aftermath of the 1991 Dili massacre
in East Timor. Predictably, the report played down the Tanjung
Priok massacre, after KOMNAS HAM officials appointed Soelistyowati
Soegondo as chairman of the commission of inquiry.
In 1984, Soegondo was working in the Ministry of Justice. He
oversaw the extension of the period of detention for some of the
175 prisoners who were captured and, in some cases, tortured after
the killings. Other members of the nine-man commission included
former military officialsat least one of whom had close
ties to Benny Moerdani, the armed forces chief at the time of
the massacre. The commission blocked any participation by non-government
organisations into the investigation.
KOMNAS HAMs report concluded that while human rights
abuses had, indeed, occurred, there was no massacre and no evidence
of bodies being dumped. It found that although 33 people had been
killed, their deaths were a result of troops being forced to fire
on an unruly mob. Some, it declared, were killed by the mob. The
report found that 36 prisoners were subjected to torture. It recommended
that the government apologise to the relatives of the victims
and that the matter be closed.
The extraordinarily clumsy and transparent attempt to bury
the issue failed, however, resulting in a further inquiry and
the present trials.
Some of the victims families had been induced by KOMNAS
HAM and military officials to sign peace pacts with the TNI at
the conclusion of the initial investigation. But others had refused.
Outside the court on the first day of the current trials was Dewi
Warda, wife of community leader Amir Biki who was killed at Tanjung
Priok. Accompanied by human rights groups protesting the lack
of indictments of any senior commanders, she told the media she
had refused to sign any peace deal. I would be betraying
my husband and the other victims of Priok in their graves,
she said.
Intimidating military presence
A Washington Post account of the court proceedings against
Kopassus chief Sriyanto on October 30 provides a glimpse of the
pressure exerted by the military on eyewitnesses and the court.
Sriyantos lawyers had already challenged the authority of
the court to deal with events that occurred 19 years ago. Moreover,
official army spokesman Colonel Nachrowi questioned the application
of the human rights law to Tanjung Priok, claiming that the trials
were being manipulated to undermine national unity. Human rights
groups allege that witnesses have had death and kidnapping threats
made against them.
The Post reported, ... scores of uniformed soldiers
wearing the red berets of the Kopassus special forces crowded
into the third-floor courtroom of the Central Jakarta courthouse
to demonstrate support for their commander. Scores more arrived
from other army units. The soldiers, many transported to the courthouse
in military trucks and vehicles, triple-parked out front, packed
the aisles, overflowing through the French doors into the hallway.
Some were barely old enough to recall the 1984 massacre.
Sriyanto claimed that his troops were not there to intimidate,
but simply to exercise their rights as citizens.
Despite the heavy military presence, witnesses recounted the
events of September 12, 1984 that had been covered up for so long.
Husen Sape told the court how he had joined a protest demonstration
in Tanjung Priok to demand the release of four Muslims who had
been detained by police. Police had invaded a mosque after a local
cleric had made criticisms of the Suharto government. When worshippers
reacted angrily, police returned in force and arrested the four
men.
The sequence of events suggests the initial police action was
designed to provoke a demonstration, thus luring Muslim militants
out onto the streets.
As the protest approached the local police station, troops
fired on the crowd without any warning, spraying it with rifle
fire. Sape testified that after the initial rounds, troops listened
for moans among the fallen, shooting any survivors. He said that
he played dead and was thrown onto a military truck with at least
12 corpses.
Another witness to the days events, Yusron Zainuri, gave
evidence that the marchers flung themselves to the pavement when
the troops, who had their bayonets fixed, suddenly opened fire.
He was hit in the arm and chest. Zainuri said more troops arrived
and began killing survivors. He said one soldier stood over him
and shouted that he was still alive. The soldier fired again but
just missed. Zainuri was placed on the back of a military truck.
He said he could not count the corpses but they were piled four
high.
The witnesses accounts accord with information leaked
out over the years. The al Araf mosque had listed 63 people killed,
despite the swift removal of bodies and evidence from the scene.
In 1993, Tempo magazine quoted Brigadier-General H. M.
A. Sampurna as saying unidentified bodies were buried at a location
in Jeger hamlet, Rambutan village, East Jakarta.
Whatever the exact number, such a large-scale slaughter in
the Indonesian capital would not have been possible without approval
at the highest levels of the military chain of command. But, just
as in the East Timor trials, the most senior officers have escaped
scrutiny. Both Moerdani and Try Sutrisno, former Jakarta military
commander, are prominent political figures and neither has been
charged. Suharto himself has never faced a court.
The trials are proving highly inconvenient to President Megawati,
who was installed with the support of the military on the basis
of her pledge to adopt a tough line against separatist movements
in Aceh and Papua. Under Megawati the military has launched a
major offensive in Aceh and clawed back much of the political
clout it lost in the wake of Suhartos downfall. She faces
an election next year.
At the same time, in the name of the war on terror
the Australian government has recently begun renewing ties, not
only with the TNI, but specifically with Kopassus.
In August, Canberra announced a joint training program between
the Australian military and Kopassus, and defence chiefs revealed
that Sriyanto would visit Australia in September for discussions.
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer insisted at the time there would
be vetting of any Kopassus personnel involved in human
rights abuses.
Whatever the outcome of the Tanjung Priok trials, Sriyantos
high-level visit exposes Downers remarks as nothing more
than a cynical ploy aimed at covering up Canberras long-standing
relations with Indonesias specialist thugs and practitioners
of state terror.
See Also:
Australian military renews
ties with Indonesias military thugs
[22 August 2003]
The US exploits terrorist
threats to step up pressure on Indonesia
[2 October 2002]
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