RUMIT, RUWET DAN RUSUH NYA JALAN INDONESIA MENUJU DEMOKRASI
  DALAM WADAH NKRI, NAMUN PERJUANGAN PATRIOTIK TIDAK KENAL AKHIR
   
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Holy Uncle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  Indonesia Struggles Against TNI Hegemony

Military repression continues despite commitment to reform

Benjamin Terrall (bterrall)

Published 2007-07-04 13:42 (KST)

Although Indonesia's government has committed to reforming the Indonesian 
military (TNI) territorial command structure, which allows the armed forces 
to maintain units down to the village level throughout the country, this 
apparatus has actually been reinforced in the name of "counterterrorism."

In late May, Indonesian Marines killed four farmers in a land dispute. 
Bambang Widodo Umar, a lecturer at the University of Indonesia, argued in 
the Jakarta Post that the shootings show "TNI structural reform is not 
working. Conflicts between the military and civilians are happening 
everywhere. The TNI should not be involved in everything. Let law 
enforcement institutions, such as the police and the courts, be responsible 
for law enforcement."

But an Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) statement "on the occasion of 
the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture," which took place on 
June 26, indicates that Indonesian police also lean toward excessive force 
with a zeal that recalls U.S. military practices at Abu Ghraib and 
Guantanamo. In discussing cases in which Indonesian police beat suspects to 
death, the Hong Kong-based AHRC wrote, "It is hard for victims of torture to 
find ways of obtaining redress, including compensation, reinstatement and 
punishment of the perpetrators. The conclusion one may inevitably draw, is 
that Indonesia is a state which allows its agents to torture persons and 
denies the victim the right to seek redress for such a crime."

A 2004 law mandated the government's taking over TNI businesses, but that 
process is moving slowly at best. In February, Human Rights Watch said 
Jakarta's foot-dragging on the issue "undermines civilian control over the 
TNI and fuels human rights abuses."

The Jakarta Post reports, "Almost 70 percent of TNI's annual budget is 
derived from its diversified business activities. This year's defense budget 
is set at 32 trillion rupees (US$3.63 billion) or 4.5 percent of the state 
budget." But though the government initially identified 1,500 businesses 
that could be classified as military properties, a subsequent estimate only 
identified six military businesses as profitable enough to qualify for 
takeover.

Thanks to the East Timor and Indonesia Human Rights Network (ETAN), and its 
allies in the U.S. Congress, several provisions in the United States' new 
Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill (H.R. 2764) require reporting on 
progress in human rights, accountability and military reform in Indonesia, 
and justice for East Timor, prior to release of some military assistance 
funds to Jakarta. Though not as tough as past legislation, ETAN helped the 
bill advance. The new language, at least, puts on the public record a 
dissent from the Bush Administration's policy of blanket support for the 
TNI.

"Military reform in Indonesia remains stalled and human rights 
accountability lacking," said John M. Miller, national coordinator of ETAN. 
"The Bush administration's policy of nearly unrestricted military assistance 
to Indonesia has clearly failed.

"The House appropriations bill highlights many of the most needed reforms. 
In contrast, the Bush administration appears to have no real strategy to 
promote basic reform of the Indonesian military," Miller added. "Jakarta's 
failure to pursue effective reform underscores the need for the U.S. to use 
the only real leverage it has to press for change -- strong and binding 
restrictions on military assistance."

Miller pointed out, "Historically, the Indonesian military's worst abuses 
took place when the U.S. was most engaged. Only after Congress began 
restricting military assistance was the ground laid for Suharto's fall and 
East Timor's independence."

A new report from the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium 
of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), based on more than a year of research, 
concluded that Indonesia is one of the largest recipients of post- 9/11 
military training and assistance programs.

The report also makes clear why TNI spokesman Sagom Tamboen recently 
commented to The Australian about possible limits on U.S. military aid in 
the appropriations bill: "If in fact the restrictions are put in place, we 
believe that the government will have other options … anyway, we're 
accustomed to limitations."

The ICIJ found that, through fiscal year 2005, Indonesia was the largest 
recipient of Regional Defense Counterterrorism Fellowship Program (CTFP) 
training. As the ICIJ wrote, "Operating since 2002 with budgets of $20 
million to $25 million per year, the CTFP appears in many ways nearly 
identical to the U.S. government's long-standing IMET program, which also 
trains foreign military officers. In fact, many of the courses offered under 
CTFP are virtually the same as those offered under IMET."

(Congress has become highly critical of ongoing Pentagon efforts to receive 
a blank check to fund foreign militaries, including Indonesia's, without any 
of the conditions which pertain to military aid programs overseen by the 
State Department.)

The ICIJ notes, "from 2002 to 2004, the same Indonesian forces that were 
prohibited from receiving anything beyond the most vanilla of IMET courses 
on human rights were simultaneously receiving tutelage on 'Intelligence in 
Combating Terrorism' and 'Student Military Police Prep' under CTFP, 
according to Defense Department documents obtained by ICIJ under a Freedom 
of Information Act request. In fact, in 2002 and 2003 Indonesia pulled in 
close to $4 million in CTFP funding, making the troubled Southeast Asian 
nation the No. 1 recipient of such funds."

The ICIJ also found that a U.S. military program for Jakarta dedicated to 
"securing strategic sea lanes" cost more than $18 million.

In its 2007 country report on Indonesia, Amnesty International wrote, "The 
majority of human rights violations by the security forces were not 
investigated, and impunity for past violations persisted. The Attorney 
General's Office (AGO) failed to act on two cases in which the National 
Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM) had submitted evidence in 2004 that 
crimes against humanity had been committed by the security forces."

Ed McWilliams, Political Counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta from 1996 
to 1999, and now an independent human rights advocate, told me, "In a real 
sense the post-Suharto democratic transition never transpired in West Papua, 
where the military and police continue to employ terror, torture and 
extrajudicial killing to enforce Jakarta's rule. While TNI impunity for 
abuses and corruption remain a problem throughout the archipelago, it is 
particularly acute in West Papua. While the Suharto dictatorship is gone, 
its hallmarks of repression and abuse live on in West Papua."

Col. Burhanuddin Siagian last month responded to West Papuan calls for 
self-determination by threatening to "destroy" anyone who "betrays" 
Indonesia. Two indictments issued in 2003 state that Siagian made speeches 
threatening to kill East Timorese independence supporters and was 
responsible for the deaths of seven men in April 1999.

McWilliams commented, "Of the many dark scenarios posed for West Papua's 
future perhaps the most dire is the threat of communal conflict as erupted a 
few years ago in the Maluku's and Poso. As in those neighboring areas, the 
TNI in West Papua is fueling sectarian strife by recruiting largely Muslim 
migrants to form paramilitaries loyal to Jakarta's rule. It is also creating 
Papuan militias along the lines of those it created to devastating effect in 
East Timor. As in the past throughout the archipelago, the TNI aims to 
generate communal tensions in West Papua as a justification for maintaining 
its presence and for continuing to exploit the region's vast natural 
resources."

But dissidents throughout Indonesia continue to struggle against military 
hegemony. One example is the weekly protest in Jakarta by survivors and 
family members of victims of TNI atrocities (including the Tanjung Priok 
shootings of 1984, the Lampung killings of "militants" in 1989 and the May 
1998 shooting of students) who are demanding an end to impunity for 
"security" forces.

Anti-militarist activism within Indonesia alone cannot turn the tide. Ed 
McWilliams argues, "The fate of real military reform and possibly the 
success of the democratic transition in Indonesia depends very much on the 
U.S. Congress's willingness to insist on real reform, especially to push for 
genuine civilian control of the military and an end to TNI impunity. 
Democrats, now in control of both houses, must understand that an unreformed 
TNI, one that supports and has helped create fundamentalist Islamic militias 
inside Indonesia, cannot be a credible partner in the so-called 'war on 
terror.' The U.S. Congress should heed the voices of human rights defenders 
in Indonesia and refuse to bankroll TNI criminality, abuses and impunity."

http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?at_code=420378

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