| Subject: NY Times: New Twist in Deaths of
Americans in Indonesia
New York Times
January 13, 2006
New Twist in Deaths of Americans in Indonesia
By Raymond Bonner
The New York Times
JAKARTA An Indonesian who was indicted by a federal grand jury in
Washington in connection with the killing of two American school teachers
in Papua Province has admitted to the police that he fired shots during
the ambush, but he also says he saw three men in Indonesian military
uniforms firing at the teachers' convoy, his lawyer said Friday.
Anthonius Wamang, the accused, who was turned over by the FBI to the
Indonesian police Wednesday, told the police he had been given the bullets
by a senior Indonesian soldier, Wamang's lawyer, Albert Rumbekwan, said in
a telephone interview from Papua.
The administration of President George W. Bush had pushed hard for a
resolution of the case, and expressed satisfaction when Wamang and 11
others suspects, one as young as 14, were detained late Wednesday. But
Wamang's statements will likely prolong the investigation, as well as
complicate efforts of the Bush administration to resume full military
relations with Indonesia. They contradict previous public statements by
senior officials from the U.S. administration that the Indonesian military
was not involved in the ambush.
Wamang, a member of a Papuan separatist organization, said he had
emptied one magazine from an M-16 rifle, Rumbekwan said. Investigators
said previously that they had found scores of bullet casings at the scene
of the ambush, in 2002, on road owned by an American mining company,
Freeport-McMoRan.
Other evidence emerged Friday that could put the United States in an
uncomfortable position in this highly nationalistic country. According to
the men detained Wednesday, they were lured by the FBI into showing up at
a small hotel, and were then promptly turned over to the Indonesian
police.
The U.S. Embassy in Jakarta declined to comment about Wamang's
statements or allegations of an FBI trap.
"We believed we were going to America," Viktus Wanmang, a
57-year-old farmer who was among those who showed up at the hotel and was
then detained, said in a telephone interview Friday. He was released, as
were three others, on Friday.
The men were told they would be interviewed about the case in the
United States because it would be safer for them there, said Denny Yomaki,
an officer with the Institute for Human Rights Study and Advocacy in
Papua, who spent much of Friday interviewing the men who had been detained
and released. The men were told their families would be given 650,000
rupiah, or about $70, for each day they were in the United States, Yomaki
said.
The men were told to go to the Amole II Hotel in the town of Timika on
Wednesday evening. They arrived with bags packed for a trip to the United
States, Wanmang and Yomaki said.
But when they reached the hotel, they were met by two FBI agents and a
third American, who some of the men thought was a Freeport employee,
Yomaki said. The FBI agents hustled the men into a truck with no windows.
"The car was driven at high speeds," Wanmang said. "When
we stopped, when the car door opened, there was a group of police
waiting," he said.
None of the men have been charged with any crimes, except Anthonius
Wamang, who has been indicted in the United States on two counts of murder
and eight counts of attempted murder.
Eight Americans were wounded in the ambush, and an Indonesian teacher
was killed, along with two American teachers, Edwin Burgon, of Sun River,
Oregon, and Ricky Spier, of Littleton, Colorado. The teachers worked at
the Freeport school.
Earlier this year, the group Human Rights Study and Advocacy issued a
report connecting Wamang to the Indonesian military. On one occasion, he
was paid by the Indonesian military for his travel to Jakarta, the report
said.
------------------------------------
Asia Times Saturday, January 14, 2006
Arrests in Papua Ambush Boon to US Ties
By Bill Guerin
JAKARTA - An event in the remote Indonesian province of Papua,
thousands of kilometers from Washington, seems certain to result in a much
stronger position for Jakarta within the already fast-improving
relationship between the two countries.
Twelve men, including a local rebel operational commander wanted by the
United States for the murder of two American teachers in a 2002 ambush
near the giant US-operated Freeport Grasberg copper and gold mine, have
been detained. Americans Ted Burcon and Rickey Lean Spier were killed in
the attack.
The province is home to a group of poorly armed independence fighters
known as the Free Papua Organization (OPM), which seeks an independent
state.
Media reports claim that the US Federal Bureau of Investigation had
lured the rebels to a hotel in Timika, near the mine, on the promise that
they would be taken to the US to tell their side of the story. National
Police deputy spokesman Anton Bahrul Alam confirmed that the FBI had
assisted with the arrests.
Suspicions were one thing, but local and FBI investigations found no
evidence that Indonesian troops were implicated in the 2002 crime. The
result of a protracted joint Indonesia-FBI investigation was a US grand
jury's indictment in June 2004 of Antonius Wamang on two counts of murder,
eight counts of attempted murder and other related offenses in connection
with the killings.
Wamang is one of those detained. Though the 12 have yet to be formally
charged over the killings, Alam said a fingerprint taken from the scene of
the murders matched Wamang's. During police interrogation, Wamang is
reported to have "confessed to firing the automatic weapon" used
in the killings.
Ties between Washington and Jakarta quickly became strained after the
killings. But a statement at the time from then-US attorney general John
Ashcroft also cleared the Indonesian military (TNI) of any role in the
attack.
His announcement came just one day after a US congressional
subcommittee renewed a ban on the provision of funds for the Defense
Department's International Military Education and Training (IMET) program
for Indonesia, prompting claims that Washington was sacrificing justice
for the victims for the sake of resuming bilateral military ties.
The TNI had blamed the OPM for the attack, although Wamang in an
interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corp last year claimed that
Indonesian troops had provided ammunition for the shootings.
Ashcroft and FBI director Robert Mueller blamed the Papua separatists
for the Freeport attack and claimed Wamang's indictment illustrated
"the importance of international cooperation to combat
terrorism".
This cut little ice with local and international rights groups who cast
doubt on Wamang's involvement in the ambush, with some saying he worked as
a military informer. They suggested the attack was an effort by TNI to
discredit the separatist movement or extort money from Freeport.
TNI gets only 30% of its funding from the central government and makes
up the shortfall by its widespread involvement in businesses, both legal
and illegal. Payments for security services received from multinationals,
such as those from Freeport and from ExxonMobil's natural-gas facilities
in Aceh, at the other end of the archipelago, have provided TNI with a
significant source of income.
Freeport abruptly stopped these payments shortly before the ambush. To
appease investor anger and disgust after the meltdown of Enron and
WorldCom, the administration of US President George W Bush had pushed a
bill through Congress that demanded greater corporate accountability. The
Corporate Fraud Act, implemented on July 26, 2002, required the disclosure
of such payments, which accounts for Freeport's recent admission that it
paid out nearly US$20 million to military and police officials in Papua
between 1998 and 2004.
Indonesian Attorney General Abdul Rahman Saleh has promised to
"look into" Freeport's allegations before deciding whether to
launch a graft probe. The company has denied breaking any laws but the
government has said such payments are illegal. If individual soldiers of
whatever rank kept any of the money themselves, it would be a criminal
offense.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a retired four-star general who
last month ordered the military to play a greater role in the "war
against terrorism", is today expected to announce his choice for the
next TNI commander-in-chief, a key job in the anti-terror campaign.
Kusnanto Anggoro, a military analyst with the Center for Strategic and
International Studies in Jakarta, tips air force chief Air Marshal Djoko
Suyanto to replace General Endriartono Sutarto, who tendered his
resignation to former president Megawati Sukarnoputri in September 2004
but is still serving as TNI commander.
Megawati stirred up controversy when, although only a caretaker leader
after losing the presidential election, she approved Sutarto's resignation
and recommended hardliner General Ryamizard as his successor. Yudhoyono
annulled Megawati's decision when he took over in October 2004, a move
that angered many lawmakers.
Why now?
One clue to the answer to the most obvious question - why did police
act now, so long after the incident? - may lie in statements from both
governments.
"Seeking justice for this crime remains a priority for the United
States, and we are pleased that the Indonesian government also recognizes
the importance of this case," State Department spokesman Sean
McCormack said. "We will continue to follow this case closely."
Commenting on a proposed visit to Jakarta by US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, Foreign Affairs Minister Hassan Wirayuda noted a
"growing and accepted view in the US to see Indonesia in a much
broader context rather than in snapshots of events like human-rights
violations ... and military reform".
Rice had reinstated full IMET eligibility for Indonesia, and Wirayuda
described her planned visit as one that would "underline the
importance of the relationship between Indonesia and the US, and the
growing appreciation of Indonesia by the US".
The United States has shown a long-term commitment to post-tsunami
reconstruction in Aceh, support for Indonesia's reform agenda and for the
country's efforts to reform its justice system and military.
The arrests may well lead to Jakarta's closest ever relationship with
Washington as partisan differences in both governments gradually dissolve.
Aloysius Renwarin, a lawyer representing the 12, said, "They are
being sacrificed for the relationship between the US and Indonesia."
Yet the arrests alone will not be enough to shore up US support for even
deeper ties with the military.
Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy, the most vocal opponent of US funding
of IMET for Indonesia in Congress, is reported to have called the arrests
"a step in the right direction" though noting that "there
are so many unanswered questions in this case, including who these people
are and what role they may have had in these crimes."
Washington will press for its pound of flesh by demanding that Wamang,
at least, be tried by a US court. If convicted he could face the death
penalty. Although Indonesia has no extradition treaty with the US it has
been the scene of at least one infamous Central Intelligence Agency
"rendering", when alleged al-Qaeda operative Omar al Faruq was
spirited away to a secret location.
A politically stable and US-friendly Indonesia would help US strategic
and economic interests in the region, although the relationship is certain
to remain a very different kettle of fish to the two other notable
regional relationships the United States has, with its
"sheriffs" in Singapore and Sydney.
Bill Guerin, a Jakarta correspondent for Asia Times Online since 2000,
has worked in Indonesia for 20 years as a journalist. He has been
published by the BBC on East Timor and specializes in business/economic
and political analysis in Indonesia.
------------------------------------------
Joyo Indonesia News Service
see also New Facts
Link Indonesian Military to "Terror Attack" on U.S. Citizens
The Arrests of 11 January 2005—A
Preliminary Account
Papua Puppetry Leaves Murders Unsolved [+Freeport Inquiry]
Back to January
menu
December 2005 menu
World Leaders Contact List
Main Postings Menu
|