http://www.inthesetimes.com/site/main/article/2317/

      Features > September 13, 2005
      Brothers in Arms
      The United States moves a step closer to restoring military aid to 
Indonesia, despite its massive human rights abuses
      By Ben Terrall
             
            A human rights activist carries a poster of Munir, who was poisoned 
on a plane in route from Jakarta to Amsterdam, during a peace demonstration in 
Jakarta.
           

      On June 28, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to remove all 
restrictions on foreign military financing for Indonesia in the fiscal year 
2006 Foreign Operations Appropriations bill. The restrictions were first put in 
place after the Indonesian military's destruction of East Timor following the 
half-island's pro-independence vote in August of 1999.

      The House decision follows years of Bush administration lobbying aimed at 
rehabilitating Jakarta's image. When Indonesian President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono came to the United States in late May, the White House repeatedly 
described Yudhoyono as a reformer. "The president told me he's in the process 
of reforming the military and I believe him," Bush said.

      But retired Foreign Service Officer Ed McWilliams, a political counselor 
to the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta from 1996 to 1999 and now a human rights 
activist, is not convinced. He points to this year's State Department Country 
Report on Human Rights Practices, which said of Indonesia, "Security force 
members murdered, tortured, raped, beat, and arbitrarily detained civilians and 
members of separatist movements, especially in [the province] Aceh and to a 
lesser extent in Papua."

      "As a creature of the TNI [Indonesian military], Yudhoyono is even less 
likely to assert civilian control over the military than the previous three 
Indonesian presidents," McWilliams says. "The TNI continues to act with 
impunity: It resisted allowing international help into Aceh for a critical 
three days after the January tsunami. It repeatedly sought early departure of 
international non-governmental organizations, and prevented international 
assistance from getting to 120,000 Acehnese displaced from pre-tsunami 
conflict."

      The TNI in Aceh
      The TNI also refused calls for a ceasefire in Aceh, until just days 
before the government signed a tentative peace deal with Free Aceh Movement 
(GAM) resistance fighters on August 15. As written, the agreement gives the 
military a number of opportunities to circumvent it. The TNI has already 
exploited the deal's ambiguities by arguing that a new human rights court and 
separate truth commission for Aceh should not deal with past crimes.

      Contradicting every credible human rights organization to issue a report 
on the region, the new TNI commander in Aceh, Major-General Supiadin, told the 
Jakarta Post on June 16 that military forces had never committed a single human 
rights violation in the province. Regarding the impact of the tsunami, he said, 
"Heart wrenching is the loss of firearms and ammunition, buried under the sand."

      Shadia Marhaban, a member of a non-violent student group Aceh Referendum 
Information Center, which organized a rally supporting a referendum for 
self-determination in Aceh that brought out 1.5 million people, says, "TNI 
higher-ups in Aceh are mostly from the group responsible for the [1999] 
destruction of East Timor, and won't go along with any reform agenda." 

      One of those active duty commanding officers is retired general Kiki 
Syahnakri, indicted for crimes against humanity by a U.N.-backed court in East 
Timor for his actions as martial law commander during the 1999 Timor campaign. 
Syahnakri now represents the conglomerate Artha Graha in its efforts to profit 
from Aceh's reconstruction.

      Marhaban, who was a civil society representative in recent peace talks 
between GAM and TNI in Finland, believes Jakarta only agreed to the talks 
because of the international attention focused on Aceh by the tsunami and the 
enormous amounts of international aid money at stake. The previous talks 
abruptly ended in July 2002 when Jakarta arrested civilian negotiators, citing 
a sweeping, vaguely defined anti-terror law. The former chief negotiator for 
GAM was among many prisoners trapped in jails destroyed by the tsunami. The New 
York-based group Human Rights First wrote, "among those who died in detention 
were many accused GAM supporters who had been denied access to a lawyer, 
subjected to torture, and convicted in trials that did not meet international 
standards."

      Lessons from Iraq
      In May, President Bush explained that in working to undo existing limits 
on military aid to Jakarta, "we want there to be exchanges between our military 
corps that will help lead to better understandings." But for four decades, such 
"exchanges" have involved U.S. training of the notoriously brutal Kopassus 
special forces troops and other "security" forces specializing in internal 
repression. (Since it won its independence from the Dutch after WWII, Indonesia 
has never faced a serious external military threat). 

      In the May 2003 imposition of martial law in Aceh-during which the TNI 
launched its largest operation since the 1975 invasion of East Timor-the 
military "embedded" journalists and established a media center to control the 
flow of information. TNI spokesman Major General Sjafrie Sjamsuddin explained, 
"These regulations were sent to us by the U.S. Pacific Command. It is what they 
used in Iraq. . Of course, we have adapted them to our local environment."

      Human Rights First argues that another aspect of the Iraq war has served 
the TNI well: "Indonesian security officials responded to human rights 
criticism aggressively, pointing to the United States invasion of Iraq and 
subsequent acts of torture in Abu Ghraib prison to justify Indonesia's own 
military operations and question the credibility of American human rights 
policies."

      A Climate of Impunity
      Yudhoyono and his supporters in the West make much of efforts to combat 
corruption in Indonesia. Yudhoyono told Business Week, "Fighting corruption is 
very, very important to our competitiveness. If we fail, we will lose the 
battle to attract foreign capital." But there is little evidence of any curbing 
of military corruption, which Karen Orenstein, Washington Coordinator of the 
East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN), calls "massive." Orenstein 
points out that "the majority of the military's budget comes from legal and 
illegal ventures, including extortion of U.S.-based corporations operating in 
Indonesia, environmentally devastating illegal logging, prostitution, and both 
drug and human trafficking."

      Nor does the climate of impunity seem to have shifted regarding past 
atrocities committed by the military. On May 26, a U.N. Commission of Experts 
appointed by Kofi Annan released a report on Jakarta's Ad Hoc Human Rights 
Court for East Timor, which was set up to investigate crimes against humanity 
perpetrated by Indonesian security forces and their militia proxies in East 
Timor in 1999. The U.N. experts found that the Indonesian tribunal was 
"manifestly inadequate, primarily due to a lack of commitment on the part of 
the prosecution." Of the 18 people indicted and tried, all but one (a Timorese 
civilian) were either acquitted or freed on appeal. 

      The report further noted, "The failure to investigate and prosecute the 
defendants in a credible manner has not achieved accountability of those who 
bear the greatest responsibility for serious violations." It recommended that 
if Jakarta does not successfully prosecute those charged within six months, the 
United Nations should try them before an international tribunal or refer cases 
to the International Criminal Court.

      The Murder of Munir
      Justice has been similarly elusive in the investigation of the murder of 
Munir, a leading Indonesian human rights activist. The 38-year-old lawyer was 
poisoned with arsenic on September 7, 2004, while flying to the Netherlands. An 
Indonesian fact-finding team found that officials of BIN, Jakarta's main 
intelligence agency, were involved in Munir's killing. The former BIN chief, 
retired general A.M. Hendropriyono, refused to respond to a summons to testify 
before the team. Hendropriyono is infamous for serving as district military 
commander in Lampung when, in 1989, the TNI massacred hundreds of Muslim youth, 
an incident that Munir later investigated.

      Hendropriyono received U.S. military training at Fort Leavenworth in 
1980. He was later involved in a training program for Indonesian officers at 
Norwich University in Vermont, which was cancelled after sustained activist 
pressure. Norwich's president conceded, "This army has not demonstrated a 
commitment to . respect for civilian authority by the military."

      The Commission for Disappearances and Victims of Violence (Kontras), an 
organization Munir founded, recently came to a similar conclusion. In a June 21 
report, "Difficult to Imagine TNI's Future Without Politics of Violence," the 
group concluded that military impunity of human rights violations is growing 
stronger. Among the reasons they cited were the continued presence within 
structures of power of high military officers suspected of being responsible 
for such crimes; the cessation of efforts to revise laws on military tribunals; 
and the repeated refusal of the military to cooperate in efforts to uphold the 
law.

      Back in Washington, the House Appropriations bill is currently being 
reconciled with the Senate version, which would keep some existing restrictions 
and add new reporting requirements about the TNI's behavior. The two bills 
could be reconciled as early as late September. 

      Orenstein calls the Senate version of the Foreign Operations 
Appropriations bill "an improvement over the House version, which was nothing 
less than a total sell-out on human rights and justice, under the leadership of 
[Republican] Arizona Representative Jim Kolbe at the behest of the Bush 
administration."
     


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