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Indonesian inquiry unearths conspiracy to murder civil rights
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By John Roberts
2 April 2005
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Despite its limited character, the official investigation into
the murder of Indonesian human rights activist Munir Said Thalib
last year has exposed evidence indicating a high-level conspiracy
in what has all the hallmarks of a politically-motivated assassination.
Last September 7, Munir died in agony from a massive dose of
arsenic on Flight 974 from Singapore to Amsterdam, three hours
from its destination. The flight, operated by Indonesias
state-owned national airline Garuda, originated in Jakarta.
A series of unexplained delays and bureaucratic wrangling held
up the release of the Dutch autopsy report for two months. Public
outrage over the death compelled Indonesian President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono to appoint a 12-man fact-finding commission, including
human rights activists, to investigate the murder.
An interim commission report released last month implicated
at least five Garuda officials and employees in the crime. Garuda
pilot Pollycarpus Budharia Priyanto was charged on March 18 with
premeditated murder after five days of interrogation and faces
a possible death penalty.
Along with Pollycarpus, the airlines former president
director Indra Setiawan, security head Ramelgia Anwar, the secretary
to the chief pilot Rohainil Aini and vice president for human
resources Daan Ahmad have been named. All deny any involvement.
The commission also found strong indications that
two as-yet unnamed members of the State Intelligence Agency (BIN)
were involved in the conspiracy.
Police believe that the poison was administered to Munir in
his in-flight meal. Despite never having met Munir, Pollycarpus
made a number of phone calls to him before both men joined the
flight in Jakarta. The Garuda pilot swapped seats with Munir,
taking Munirs economy class seat 40G and placing Munir in
business class seat 3K, where he was given his deadly meal.
The reasons for Pollycarpuss trip appear to be bogus.
At first, Garuda officials claimed that the pilot was being sent
to Singapore to check on in-flight service for training purposes.
The reason was then changed to checking the landing gear of a
Boeing 747normally the job of Singapore-based mechanics
and engineers. Pollycarpus did not fly Boeings but European Airbus
330 aircraft. Moreover, he left Singapore on the first flight
back to Jakarta the following morning.
Garuda head Setiawan issued a letter on August 11, 2004, appointing
Pollycarpus as an aviation security officer. Police found that
Pollycarpus was not qualified for the position. It was also the
first time that the airlines president director had ever
been directly involved in such an appointment.
Another letter dated September 4, authorising Pollycarpuss
trip, was signed by airline security head Anwar. According to
police, however, the document was written on September 15 and
signed on September 1710 days after the murder. On March
23, the fact-finding commission told police that airline vice-president
Daan Ahmad had probably drawn up this letter.
The paper trail included a letter by Garuda secretary Aini
authorising Pollycarpuss flight arrangements although she
had no authority to do so. Under police questioning, she admitted
that all three letters were doctored.
What is known about Pollycarpus, who was born in Papua, indicates
that at the very least he has been on the fringes of the murky
world of Indonesian security forces. Munirs civil rights
associates claim that the pilot has connections with BIN and flew
missions in Papua and East Timor.
A Sydney Morning Herald report noted that Pollycarpus
was in East Timor around the time of the 1999 violence against
pro-independence reporters and met notorious pro-Jakarta militia
leader Eurico Guterres. Pollycarpus has hired Guterress
lawyer, Suhardi Sumomulyono, to represent him.
An article by Canadas West Papua Network reported that
an Indonesian journalist Muhammad Rusmadi recognised Pollycarpus.
The pilot had offered to take him to meet separatist GAM (Free
Aceh Movement) rebels during fierce fighting around the town of
Lhokseumawe in Aceh late in 2003. Rusmadi refused the offer.
The lack of any direct motive on the part of Pollycarpus or
Garuda officials strongly suggests a broader conspiracy. Apart
from never having met Munir, the pilot had no other direct connection
to him. No one has indicated why top Garuda executives would want
Munir dead.
The Indonesian military, on the other hand, had every reason
for killing Munir. The activist had been a marked man for some
time. As well as threats and attacks on his office, at least one
previous attempt had been made to kill him using a bomb. He had
a reputation inside Indonesia and internationally for investigating
human rights abuses by the security forces.
Munir first come to prominence in 1998 for exposing the Suharto
regimes abuses and was in the forefront of detailing the
militarys crimes in East Timor, Papua and Aceh. He founded
two civil rights groups, the Commission for Missing Persons and
Victims of Violence (Kontras) in 1998 and the Indonesian Human
Rights Monitor (Imparsial).
At the time of his death, friends believe Munir was preparing
a report on corruption in relation to the militarys operations
and civic programs in Aceh. There is no indication that he was
investigating Garuda or any of its operations.
The fact-finding commission has already tentatively pointed
the finger at BIN, whose head at the time of Munirs murder
was former general Ahmad Hendropriyono. Hendropriyono, an officer
in the notorious Kopassus special forces, was a commander in South
Sumatra in February 1989 when troops stormed a village in Lampung
Province, killing more than 100 men, women and children.
Current BIN director Syamsir Siregar has insisted that there
is no legal proof of BIN involvement in the Munir murder. But
as Imparsial director Rachland Nashidik, a member of the fact-finding
commission, commented to the media: Garuda doesnt
have any reason to murder Munir. The question is: who has the
power to use Garuda for their own benefit?... Lets hope
the investigation doesnt stop with (Pollycarpuss)
arrest.
The indications are that the inquiry will be limited. Civil
rights activist and friend of Munir, Smita Notosusanto, resigned
from the fact-finding team because the terms of reference were
too narrow. The commission has no power to interview government
officials, including BIN officers.
Munirs widow Suciwati has criticised the Indonesian inquiry.
In Geneva on March 23, she appealed to the UN High Commission
on Human Rights to put pressure on the Indonesian government for
a full and open inquiry. The appeal brought an immediate rebuke
from Foreign Minister Hassan Wirajuda, who declared that the affair
was a domestic matter.
Indonesian authorities appear to be dragging their feet in
obtaining crucial evidence from the Netherlands, including police
interviews with passengers and crew from Munirs flight.
The Indonesian attorney generals office is yet to reassure
the Dutch government that the death penalty will not be applied
to anyone convicted over the murder.
If BIN or the Indonesian armed forces (TNI) were involved,
it is one more indication of a return to the brutal methods of
the Suharto junta. While the generals were compelled to take a
step back after Suhartos fall from power in 1998, there
have been no fundamental changes to the TNI in the past seven
years. In fact, helped by the complicity of so-called reformers
like Megawati Sukarnoputri, the TNI has been asserting its interests
in an increasingly aggressive fashion.
Under Megawatis presidency, for instance, Kopassus carried
out the blatant murder of Papuan leader Theys Eluay in November
2001. Local Kopassus soldiers were convicted of the murder but
received light sentences and no senior officers were investigated.
The TNI is certainly capable of orchestrating the murder of a
civil rights activist who had exposed its corrupt and brutal practices.
See Also:
Did the Indonesian
military murder human rights activist Munir?
[1 December 2004]
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