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Subject: update: General Murdani Dies at 74
Received from Joyo Indonesia News
Associated Press
August 29, 2004
Indonesian General Murdani Dies at 74
By SLOBODAN LEKIC
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Gen. Leonardus Benyamin Murdani, an Indonesian
military hero who led the invasions of West Papua and East Timor and forged
close ties with the U.S. military, died Sunday. He was 74.
The retired four-star general passed away at Jakarta's Gatot Subroto military
hospital from complications following a stroke, hospital staff said.
Murdani, a Roman Catholic from the Central Javanese town of Solo, entered the
military soon after Indonesia's 1945-49 war of independence against the Dutch.
He joined the army's elite parachute battalion and retained a close
association with the special forces unit for the rest of his life. The
red-bereted commandos - known by their acronym as Kopassus - have been blamed
for numerous human rights atrocities throughout Indonesia.
He then spent a year in the 1950s training in the United States.
In what has become part of national folklore, Murdani, by then a major,
parachuted with 120 men into the Dutch colony of West Papua in 1962 during
Indonesia's effort to occupy the region. Although his unit was devastated by
Dutch Marines, the brief conflict ended with the United Nations handing the vast
territory to Indonesia.
Most Papuans opposed the move, and a small rebellion continues there to this
day. Human rights groups say about 100,000 Papuans have perished in
counterinsurgency operations since the 1960s.
Murdani emerged as a hero and received the country's highest medal from
then-President Sukarno. He was dispatched to Thailand to organize covert
intelligence operations against Malaysia, which Sukarno attempted to subvert
until his overthrow by Gen. Suharto in 1966.
Murdani was not directly involved in the massacres that followed the military
takeover. As many as 800,000 leftists were murdered in the bloodshed that
followed the U.S.-backed coup. Hundreds of thousands of others were jailed and
exiled to distant penal colonies.
Murdani became a trusted member of Suharto's inner circle.
In 1975, Murdani planned and oversaw the invasion of the former Portuguese
colony of East Timor. The occupation was sanctioned by then-U.S. President
Gerald Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger who visited Jakarta a day
before the attack.
The occupation triggered a 24-year war of liberation in which 200,000
civilians and 10,000 Indonesian soldiers perished.
Critics accused Murdani of establishing a military monopoly that ran East
Timor's coffee exports during Indonesian rule, which finally ended after a
U.N.-sponsored independence referendum in 1999.
In 1983, Murdani - by then a four star general - was named commander in chief
of the armed forces. But as a Christian who despised political Islam, Murdani
was resented by the largely Muslim officer corps.
In the late 1980s, Murdani broke with Suharto after arguments with the
dictator over his family's growing corruption. He was removed as the military
chief in 1988, but retained his post as minister of defense and security.
Murdani held on to the powerless position until 1993.
During the past decade Murdani grew close to Megawati Sukarnoputri, Sukarno's
daughter who became president after Suharto's ouster and Indonesia's first free
elections in 1999.
Despite his failing health, he helped Megawati defuse fears among the top
brass that she would implement sweeping reforms such as placing the military
under civilian control.
On Saturday, Suharto paid a final visit Murdani in the military hospital,
media reports said. The army said Murdani will be buried at Kalibata military
cemetery.
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