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Indonesian court implicates intelligence agency in murder
of human rights activist
By John Roberts
30 December 2005
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Pollycarpus Budihari Priyato, a pilot for the Indonesian state
airline Garuda, was found guilty on December 20 of the murder
of the internationally respected Indonesian human rights activist
Munir Said Thalib and sentenced to 14 years imprisonment by the
Jakarta Central District Court. The court dropped a political
bomb shell, however, when it implicated members of the Indonesian
State Intelligence Agency (BIN) in the murder despite neither
the prosecution case nor the accused himself making such a claim.
Munir had earned the hatred of the security forces by exposing
their crimes during the final years of the Suharto dictatorship
and in Aceh and West Papua after the regimes fall in 1998.
He was the founder of two of the countrys best known human
rights groupsthe Indonesian Human Rights Monitor (Imparsial)
and the Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence
(Kontas). On September 7, 2004, he was poisoned with a massive
dose of arsenic while travelling from Indonesia to the Netherlands,
via Singapore, on Air Garuda flight GA974. Amid widespread suspicions
of a state-organised assassination, Pollycarpus was arrested and
charged with the crime. The police alleged that he had offered
Munir his business class seat and then, with the assistance of
two flight attendants, laced the activists orange juice
with the poison.
In their verdict summary, the judges ruled that the Garuda
pilot was central to the murder but rejected the prosecution case
that only Pollycarpus and the attendants were involved. They declared
that there are other parties that must be found and further
investigated by law enforcers. The judges referred to dozens
of phone calls made before and after Munirs death between
Pollycarpus and a cell phone owned by the then BIN deputy director
and former military general Muchdi Purwopranjono. They stated
that they were of the opinion that an understanding has
been reached between the defendant and the phone caller over the
elimination of Munirs life.
The courts decision provoked an immediate reaction from
the administration of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, himself
a former top general. Two days after the verdict, presidential
spokesman Andi Mallarangeng announced that Yudhoyono had ordered
all government institutions and all government officials
to cooperate with further police inquiries aimed at identifying
who was behind the murder.
These instructions, however, were virtually identical to Yudhoyonos
order last December for government authorities to fully cooperate
with a fact-finding panel into the killing, established after
widespread condemnation of the previous lack of action. BIN officials
ignored the presidential directive and refused to hand over documents.
The police named commission members Rachland Nashidik and Usman
Hamid as suspects in a criminal defamation case after they publicly
accused former BIN head and Suharto-era general Abdullah Mahmud
Hendropriyono of being unhelpful toward their investigation.
Despite the obstructions, the fact-finding panel uncovered
evidence linking the assassination to BIN. The report of the inquiry
was not released but members of the commission have made public
statements about some of its contents. Human rights groups provided
various pieces of evidence indicating that Pollycarpus had been
a BIN operative over a number of years. The former BIN secretary-general
Nurhadi told the Jakarta Post that Pollycarpus had been
recruited on the orders of Hendropriyono, who was the head of
the agency at the time of Munirs murder.
The commission also found evidence that a former BIN operative
and special forces colonel, Bambang Irawan, was on flight GA974
but not on the passenger list. In addition, Munir, once he moved
into Pollycarpuss business class seat, was seated next to
an Indonesian chemist who consults for an Indonesian firm in Holland.
In the most chilling finding, the head of the fact-finding panel,
police Brigadier-General Marsudhi Hanafi, publicly stated that
the commission had uncovered a document that revealed murder on
an aircraft was one of four possible ways that BIN had considered
to kill Munir. The agency, he said, had gone as far as establishing
hit squads to carry out the assassination when the opportunity
arose.
The suppression of the commissions report by the Yudhoyono
government gave Pollycarpuss trial the character of a whitewash.
The prosecution studiously avoided any reference to the evidence
against BIN. Instead, it absurdly maintained that Pollycarpus
was an fervent Indonesian nationalist who made a spur-of-the moment
decision to murder Munir because he considered him to be someone
who caused problems in the implementation of his own programs
to support the Unitary State of Indonesia.
The prosecution case was contrary to the evidence revealed
both by the initial police inquiry and the fact-finding panel.
During the trial, prosecutors alleged that Pollycarpus, who was
on the first leg of Flight 974 supposedly to help repair an aircraft
in Singapore, actually administered the arsenic to Munir. The
evidence available to the police and the inquiry indicated that
Pollycarpus was not in position to lace his drink. This was confirmed
in the course of the trial by flight attendants Yeti Susmiyarti
and Tri Wiryaswadi
The defence case was equally suspect. In court, Pollycarpus
recanted his previous statement to police and denied recognising
Munir or having made calls to his cell phone. He rather implausibly
claimed that he had offered Munir his business class seat out
of politeness after they met in the departure lounge. His
attorneys, while insisting that their client was innocent and
a scapegoat for others, did not directly accuse BIN officials
or seek to use the evidence of the fact-finding commission.
The court verdict is therefore all the more noteworthy. In
the end, the judges clearly felt they could not simply rubberstamp
the blatant attempt by the prosecution and defence to cover up
BINs involvement in the killing. Munirs murder is
being viewed within Indonesia and internationally as an example
of how the security forces still operate with contempt for due
legal processseven years after Suhartos fall and the
supposed birth of democracy.
Within Indonesia, human rights groups have followed the Pollycarpus
trial closely, denouncing it as a cover-up. One of the placards
carried by demonstrators outside the court read: The police
are brave when it comes to terrorists, why are they afraid of
Munirs killer? Munirs widow, Suciwati, told
the press following the verdict: I will continue to fight
for justice. I will never stop looking for the mastermind.
Former president Abdurrahman Wahid has called for a presidential
commission with the power to investigate BIN, probe the inadequacies
of the police inquiry and all the information uncovered by the
fact-finding inquiry. Wahid warned Yudhoyono that the Munir
case is not finished and justice has yet to be served.
Yudhoyono is also under pressure from Washington. US State
Department spokesmen Sean McCormack noted that the court found
that Pollycarpus was acting as part of a larger conspiracy.
He called for further investigations and prosecutions and, significantly,
called for the release of the fact-finding commissions report.
The Bush administration is concerned that the Munir murder may
intensify congressional opposition to re-establishing relations
between the Pentagon and Jakartas armed forces and intelligence
services. During the trial, 70 members of the Congress signed
a letter to Yudhoyono calling for a clear legal move
to solve the case and for the release of the fact-finding report.
In Indonesian ruling circles, however, the prevailing view
is that the Pollycarpus verdict should be the end to the matter.
Yudhoyono has rejected calls for any special inquiry. Declaring
that too many ad hoc commissions cast state institutions in a
bad light, he told journalists that it was up to the police
to investigate, the Attorney Generals Office to prosecute,
the Supreme Court and lower judicial institutions to make the
rulings.
See Also:
Report implicates Indonesian
intelligence in murder of human rights activist
[25 July 2005]
Did the Indonesian
military murder human rights activist Munir?
[1 December 2004]
Indonesian editor
jailed under repressive libel laws
[6 October 2004]
Jakarta expels foreign
critics: a new attack on democratic rights
[22 June 2004]
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