http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/10/11/indone11859.htm

Indonesia: Keep Pressure on Abusive Army 
U.S. Should Maintain Conditions on Assistance to Indonesian Military


(Washington, October 11, 2005)-Indonesia's failure to reform its abusive 
military makes it essential for the U.S. Congress to maintain its restrictions 
on U.S. military assistance, Human Rights Watch said today. This week, 
House-Senate conferees are meeting to reconcile the annual Foreign Operations 
Appropriations bill and to decide whether restrictions on military aid to 
Indonesia should remain in place.

             Because President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was elected 
democratically, many now wrongly believe that Indonesia's military has been 
reformed. But it continues to be responsible for routine abuses, has failed to 
address past crimes and remains beyond effective civilian control. 

            Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. 
        
Because of the Indonesian military's long record of abuse in places such as 
East Timor, Aceh and Papua, Congress in 2000 placed conditions on the Foreign 
Military Financing (FMF) assistance package to the Indonesian military. In 
fiscal year 2005, the conditions included requirements that the Indonesian 
government:  



  a.. prosecute and punish members of the armed forces who have been credibly 
alleged to have committed gross violations of human rights or to have aided or 
abetted militia groups;  

  b.. ensure cooperation by the armed forces with civilian judicial authorities 
and with international efforts to resolve cases of gross violations of human 
rights in East Timor and elsewhere; and  

  c.. implement reforms to increase the transparency and accountability of 
military operations and financial management, including making publicly 
available audits of receipts and expenditures.  

 
"Because President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was elected democratically, many 
now wrongly believe that Indonesia's military has been reformed," said Brad 
Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "But it continues to be responsible 
for routine abuses, has failed to address past crimes and remains beyond 
effective civilian control."  
 
Indonesian military officers and soldiers who commit human rights violations 
remain largely beyond the reach of the law. No senior Indonesian officer has 
been held to account for war crimes and crimes against humanity in East Timor 
in 1999 or other serious violations elsewhere in the archipelago. In July, an 
appeals court overturned all convictions in the first test-case of 
accountability for Suharto-era crimes, the 1984 Tanjung Priok massacre that 
left at least 33 civilians dead. The civilian defense minister still does not 
have the ability to appoint, discipline or remove officers.  
 
Human Rights Watch called on the conferees to adopt the Senate's language for 
the Fiscal Year 2006 bill, which tracks most of the conditions from last year, 
and adds important reporting requirements to monitor credible progress on the 
human rights situation in Papua and Aceh, crucial to informing policymaking on 
Indonesia. Another Senate provision, Report on Indonesian Cooperation, section 
6108, also requires a detailed report prior to the release of International 
Military Education and Training (IMET) for Indonesia from the Secretary of 
State on U.S. and Indonesian efforts to bring to justice those responsible for 
the ambush and murder of two U.S. citizens and an Indonesian in Papua in August 
2002.  
 
Human Rights Watch expressed concern over recent statements by Indonesian 
President Yudhoyono and army chief General Endriartono Sutarto calling for the 
reinvigoration of the territorial command structure. The territorial command 
structure has, in effect, made the army an occupying force instead of focusing 
on national defense. Public opinion surveys in Indonesia have shown that it is 
deeply unpopular. Efforts to reinforce the territorial command structure serve 
as an alarming reminder of the failure to implement serious and structural 
military reform.  
 
Human Rights Watch also voiced concern over the largely unaddressed issue of 
the military's continued control of a vast network of legal and illegal 
businesses. While Indonesian legislation in 2004 requires all such business 
interests be divested by 2009, there are widespread doubts in Indonesia that 
this will happen. There are also fears that, if it does happen, the businesses 
might simply be transferred to entities controlled by senior military figures. 
Fanning fears of corruption, the military recently sold off shares in its 
private companies without notifying the authorities responsible for overseeing 
the transfer of military businesses. Human Rights Watch noted that financial 
transparency of the military's budget, as called for in the U.S. Senate 
proposal, must form the backbone of any serious reform effort.  
 
Human Rights Watch also cautioned against a simplistic response to the recent 
October 1, 2005 Bali bombings and other bombings in the past three years in 
Indonesia. Counter-terror cooperation does not justify resumption of Foreign 
Military Financing and export of lethal equipment. The police, long 
marginalized by the military, remain the key actor in counter-terror efforts. 
It was the police who successfully investigated the perpetrators of the October 
2002 Bali bombing and other attacks. The U.S. already has numerous options 
available to engage with the Indonesian government, including the military, on 
counterterrorism.  
 
"This is the wrong time to let up the pressure on the Indonesian military," 
said Adams. "Now is the time to insist that it ends abuses against civilians, 
phases out the territorial structure and ends its corrupt business practices."  
 
Supporters of military aid argue that with direct elections of the president in 
2004, the stated commitment of President Yudhoyono and Defense Minister Juwono 
Sudarsono to reform, and the recent peace agreement in Aceh, the problems are 
being solved. Yet when pressed, advocates of military aid are unable to 
articulate how the widely recognized systemic problem of abuse is being 
addressed.  
 
"Even supporters of the Indonesian military should realize that holding out the 
carrot of military assistance is the best way to help with military reform," 
said Adams. "Continued restrictions are needed to encourage structural and 
financial reform and accountability for serious human rights violations." 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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