| Subject: Indon activists caution U.S. over
military training
The Jakarta Post January 25, 2003
Activists caution U.S. over military training
Moch. N. Kurniawan and Tiarma Siboro, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
U.S. senators voted down on Thursday an attempt to limit U.S. military
training for Indonesian soldiers, a move that Indonesian activists said
would further dampen efforts to promote human rights in the country.
According to Agence France-Presse, the Senate voted 61-36 to reject an
amendment by Senator Russ Feingold to omnibus spending bills that would
have restricted a program for Indonesian military officers to come to the
United States for training and education.
Budget bills for 2003 still making their way through the U.S. Congress
would restore the program over the objections of legislators and rights
campaigners who say Jakarta must act first to punish past human rights
abuses.
Military cooperation between the two countries was sharply cut in 1999
when Congress passed the so-called Leahy Amendment following
Indonesian-backed violence in East Timor.
All military aid was suspended until certain conditions were met,
including effective measures to bring to justice members of the armed
forces and militia groups suspected of rights abuses.
Members of the Indonesian Military (TNI) were implicated in rights
abuses when pro-Jakarta militias went on the rampage after East Timor
voted for independence in 1999.
Indonesian rights activist Ori Rahman from the Commission for Missing
Persons and Victims of Violence regretted the U.S. decision, saying any
aid to TNI would only encourage its members to commit more human rights
violations.
"They should give the assistance only after TNI reforms itself,
including its budget accountability," he said.
Another rights activist, Hendardi of the Indonesian Legal Aid and Human
Right Association, said the U.S. assistance was politically motivated to
help Indonesia crack down on suspected terrorists.
"The U.S. government once stopped the assistance due to its
concern over human rights violations. Now they have resumed the aid to
pave the way for the war against terrorism," he said.
Military analyst Kusnanto Anggoro from the Centre for Strategic and
International Studies said the vote in the U.S. Senate would surely
benefit TNI through the resumption of the International Military Education
and Training (IMET) program.
Kusnanto said any U.S.-provided military training should be focused on
human rights, supremacy of the law and good military governance.
He added that the U.S. Senate's decision signaled that the U.S.
government had become more tolerant of human rights abuses committed by
TNI officers and the disappointing results of human rights trials, in
which a number of military and police officers were found not guilty of
rights violations in East Timor.
TNI spokesman Maj. Gen. Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin gave a cautious response to
the vote, saying that TNI would take into account public concerns about
rights issues.
"Until now, this country and the international community are still
unsatisfied with the results of the ad-hoc (human rights) trial, even
though the legal process against those military and police officers
accused of responsibility for the abuses was transparent.
"Critics also say that we (the military) are reluctant to
acknowledge concerns over rights issues," Sjafrie said, adding that
TNI would only participate in the IMET program if "it is aimed at
restoring a military-to-military relationship as well as improving TNI's
professionalism".
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