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Subject: An inconvenient truth
http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/stories/s2765162.htm
ABC
The Drum Unleashed
8 December 2009
An inconvenient truth
Damien Kingsbury
In Indonesian political culture, there was a view that inconvenient
or challenging truths should be suppressed in order to retain harmony.
This view had largely disappeared from Indonesian political life in the
1950s, but was re-invented by former President Suharto in order to
remove challenges to his personalised authoritarian rule between the
mid-1960s and the end of the 1990s.
One consequent of this was that Indonesia has refused to accept
culpability for the deaths of almost 200,000 people in East Timor
between 1975 and 1999. So too Indonesia has steadfastly denied
responsibility for the deaths of five Australian-based journalists at
Balibo in October 1975, maintaining the fiction that they were killed in
cross-fire.
Now, a former Indonesian special forces officer has confirmed what we
have known from a range of sources for decades, that the Balibo Five, as
they have become known, were murdered by Indonesian troops to cover up
the first moments of Indonesia's invasion of that tiny territory.
This stark admission by a former Indonesian army officer, who was at
the scene of the crime, that the Balibo Five were murdered by Indonesian
troops because they were reporting on an illegal invasion, follows the
banning and then illegal screening of the Australian movie Balibo in
Jakarta last week.
Balibo is a dramatised account of the murder of the Balibo Five, and
the search for the truth of their murder by another Australian
journalist, Roger East, who was himself murdered by Indonesian troops at
Dili's wharf almost two months later.
The Jakarta Foreign Correspondents' Club intended to screen the movie
last week, but was stopped by Indonesia's censorship board, at the
behest of the Indonesian military. An army spokesman has since said that
the movie should not be screened because it would damage Indonesia's
international standing and harm Australia-Indonesia relations.
The army spokesman also said that the search for truth over the
murder of the Balibo Five should be based on a "consensus" on those
events. This idea of "consensus" also harks back to the Suharto era, in
which a confluence of views, usually dominated by the most powerful
source ? the army ? displaced verifiable truth.
Despite the army's attempt to have Balibo banned, an Indonesian
sub-titled version was privately screened last Thursday night, and has
since been screened to audiences of hundreds in Jakarta, including
Indonesian journalists, pro-democracy and human rights activists and
others . DVDs of the movie will hit Jakarta's streets soon.
As Indonesia democratises, elements of its former authoritarian rule
continue to resurface. As the progenitor for Indonesia's descent into
authoritarian militaristic rule the army has, unsurprisingly, been the
slowest and most reluctant institution to reform. Yet the tide of
openness that necessarily accompanies democratisation has continued to
rise.
That a retired Indonesian army officer has finally confirmed what we
already knew is surprising only because he has broken ranks on the
issue.
Indonesia's has a profoundly troubled past, one of the smaller parts
of which was the murder of the Balibo Five which has become, for
outsiders at least, emblematic of the much greater horror visited upon
the people of East Timor.
There is also the murder of perhaps a half a million or more
suspected communists and sympathisers in the mid-1960s, the gross human
rights abuses and repression employed in West Papua, Aceh and upon trade
unionists, activists and even many ordinary Indonesian citizens who
lived under the Suharto regime.
The old political method of suppressing inconvenient truths continues
to hold sway in Jakarta, but it is under real challenge. It may be
expecting too much to hope for accountability for those responsible for
the murder of the Balibo Five, much less the hundreds of thousands,
perhaps millions, who have been murdered, tortured or imprisoned in
Indonesia.
But it is encouraging that a film that was intended to open a door to
the gross human rights violations in East Timor, through the device of
focusing on the deaths of six newsmen, has had the type of impact that
was hoped for it. And it is encouraging that the heavy-handed attempt to
censor the film has had the opposite effect of burying the truth, but
rather helping reveal it.
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