| Subject: ITT: Funding Indonesia's Abusive
Military
In These Times
October 2007
Funding Indonesia's Abusive Military by Ben Terrall
Counterterrorism" has become Indonesia's latest slogan for
avoiding military reform while simultaneously strengthening its apparatus
of repression. In return for its loyalty in the war on terror, the Bush
administration has side-stepped congressional concerns of military abuses
in Indonesia.
Amnesty International observed in its 2007 country report: "The
majority of human rights violations by the security forces were not
investigated, and impunity for past violations persisted." These
included two cases in which the National Human Rights Commission submitted
evidence in 2004 that security forces had committed crimes against
humanity.
A May report from the Center for Public Integrity's International
Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) concluded that the
Indonesia military (TNI) is one of the largest recipients of post-9/11
military assistance. In fact, from 2002 to 2005, Indonesia was the largest
recipient of the Pentagon's Regional Defense Counterterrorism Fellowship
Program (CTFP). The ICIJ also noted that under CTFP the TNI was receiving
tutelage on "Intelligence in Combating Terrorism" and
"Student Military Police Prep."
Ed McWilliams, political counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta from
1996 to 1999, and now an independent human rights advocate, says,
"While TNI impunity for abuses and corruption remain a problem
throughout the archipelago, it is particularly acute in West Papua. In a
real sense, the post-Suharto democratic transition never transpired in
West Papua, where the military and police continue to employ terror,
torture and extrajudicial killing to enforce Jakarta's rule."
In 1969, West Papua was incorporated into Indonesia through the threat
of force. Not much has changed. On July 5, Human Rights Watch reported,
"Both army troops and police units ... continue to engage in
indiscriminate village 'sweeping' operations in pursuit of suspected
militants, using excessive, often brutal, and at times lethal force
against civilians."
On August 16, the Indonesian paper <i>Cenderawasih Pos</i>,
reporting on anticipated demonstrations in West Papua calling for
self-determination, quoted Col. Burhanuddin Siagian as saying that the TNI
"will not hesitate to shoot on sight" pro-independence
activists. In 2003, the U.N.-backed Serious Crimes Unit in East Timor
issued two indictments which stated that Siagian made similar speeches
threatening to kill independence supporters and was responsible for the
deaths of seven Timorese men in April 1999. The group Human Rights First
noted that human rights activists from Papua were threatened after
meetings in early June with a visiting U.N. human rights official.
"[T]he TNI in West Papua is fueling sectarian strife by recruiting
largely Muslim migrants to form paramilitaries loyal to Jakarta's
rule," says McWilliams. "It is also creating Papuan militias
along the lines of those it created to devastating effect in East Timor.
As in the past throughout the archipelago, the TNI aims to generate
communal tensions in West Papua as a justification for maintaining its
presence and for continuing to exploit the region's vast natural
resources."
The East Timor and Indonesia Human Rights Network (ETAN) and its allies
in Congress, such as Rep. Nita Lowey (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.),
have pushed several provisions in the new Foreign Operations
Appropriations Bill (H.R. 2764). The measures require that the
administration report that Indonesia has made progress in human rights and
military reform before $2 million in military assistance to Jakarta is
released. Though not as tough as legislation passed following a 1991
massacre in East Timor, the new language puts on record a dissent from the
Bush administration's policy of blanket support for the TNI. Still,
McWilliams argues, more is needed.
"The fate of real military reform and possibly the success of the
democratic transition in Indonesia depends very much on the U.S. Congress'
willingness to insist on real reform, especially to push for genuine
civilian control of the military and an end to TNI impunity," he
says. "Democrats must understand that an unreformed TNI, one that--
supports and has helped create fundamentalist Islamic militias inside
Indonesia, cannot be a credible partner in the so- called 'war on terror.'
The U.S. Congress should heed the voices of human rights defenders in
Indonesia and refuse to bankroll TNI criminality, abuses and
impunity."
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