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Joyo News/Pantau
Exclusive Report
Murder at Mile 63
By S. Eben Kirksey and Andreas Harsono
U.S. intelligence reports linked the Indonesian military
to the 2002 murder of American school teachers in Timika, a
mining town in the remote Indonesian province of Papua.
Despite these reports, and opposition from the U.S.
Congress, the Bush Administration removed a decade-old ban
on funding for military education programs in Indonesia. An
Indonesian court charged that Antonius Wamang, an alleged
Papuan guerrilla, was the ringleader of this attack and
sentenced him to life in prison on 7 November 2006. Six
other alleged coconspirators were given sentences ranging
from 18 months to seven years in jail. The same day that the
sentences were handed down, Pentagon officials announced a
“new era of military co-operation” with Indonesia. Yet,
rigorous standards of evidence did not prevail in this
Indonesian court and questions remain about whether Wamang’s
group acted alone. This report is based on internal police
documents, court records, and eyewitness accounts. Antonius
Wamang, Decky Murib, Patsy Spier and more than 50 other
sources were interviewed in Timika, Jayapura, Jakarta and
Washington DC.
A TRIP TO THE BIG CITY
When Antonius Wamang boarded a passenger jet in September
2001 at Timika’s airport in Papua, his heart was pounding—he
was on a mission to get weapons and ammunition in
Indonesia’s capital of Jakarta.[1]
Born in the remote highland village of Beoga in 1972, Wamang
was a young boy when Indonesian Brigadier General Imam
Munandar launched Operation Eliminate (Operasi
Kikis) in the highlands of Papua.[2]
Anti-personnel Daisy Cluster bombs, mortars and machine-guns
were used against Papuan villagers who were armed with bows
and arrows.[3]
Nearly 30 years later, Wamang found what he thought was an
opportunity to buy arms and to fight back against the
Indonesian military.
Wamang told us he flew alone and was met at Jakarta’s
airport by Agus Anggaibak, a sandalwood dealer with ties to
the Indonesian military.[4]
According to Janes Natkime, who has long known both Wamang
and Anggaibak and currently heads the Warsi Foundation in
Timika, “Agus Anggaibak set up everything, he lobbied the
officers and arranged the money.”[5]
Anggaibak had earlier visited Wamang’s group in their jungle
hideout, encouraging them to raise money to buy guns. He
brought a rifle with him. Anggaibak showed off this weapon
in Wamang’s camp. Identifiers were etched into the gun:
“MODEL P88-9, Col 9 mmp AK, Made in Germany.”[6]
Anggaibak promised to help Wamang obtain weapons like the
one he was carrying, as well as other guns, from arms
dealers in Jakarta.[7]
Like all groups in West Papua’s Tentara Pembebasan
Nasional (National Liberation Army)—a group without a
clear hierarchical command structure founded in 1971—Wamang’s
group was poorly armed.
Antonius Wamang’s group, according to evidence presented in
the Indonesian court that later charged him with murder and
several witnesses, only had three aging weapons: an SS1, an
M16, and a bolt-action Mauser. Following several weeks of
intensive gold panning, and sandalwood collecting, Wamang
raised money to purchase more guns. Anggaibak departed for
Jakarta, with an advance payment from Wamang, where he began
working on securing a deal. Wamang later flew to meet
Anggaibak. He brought sacks of sandalwood probably worth
more than 500 million rupiah ($50,000 USD) in Jakarta.[8]
On the international market sandalwood fetches even higher
prices. This rare wood is used to make incense and perfume.
Initially Anggaibak and Wamang stayed in a
police guest house in Jakarta. A sandalwood middleman from
Makassar named Mochtar introduced Anggaibak and Wamang to
some Indonesian army and police officers. Well aware of how
to exploit internal conflicts within the Indonesian security
forces, Wamang hoped to secure weapons from one faction in
hopes of attacking another faction.
Sergeant Puji, a police officer, befriended Wamang while he
was staying at the guest house. Sergeant Puji took Wamang
and Anggaibak on trips around Jakarta. They toured around
while Puji asked them about the activities of Papuan
guerrillas around Timika. Puji said that he wanted to help
the movement: he presented Wamang with a gift of six
magazines of bullets (total 180 bullets) that could be used
in Wamang’s M16 or SS1 rifles. Puji also gave Wamang bullets
for his Mauser.[9]
One night in the guest house, Puji showed Wamang fifteen
M-16 rifles. Wamang said he paid 250 million Rupiah ($25,000
USD) for these guns and Puji held on to them for safe
keeping.[10]
Later Wamang moved to Hotel Djody at Jalan Jaksa 35, a
backpacker hostel in downtown Jakarta.[11]
He probably checked in using a false name. “Mochtar was a
regular guest here,” said Herry Blaponte, the hotel’s front
office staff. Blaponte told us Mochtar had regularly made
sandalwood business deals with his Papuan guests. Hotel
staff remembered Mochtar as having a stocky build and being
well dressed. Their memories of him are not fond, however,
since he left without paying his bill. Blaponte and hotel
security staff Mahmud Trikasno later told Indonesian chief
detective Dzainal Syarief that they did not remember
Wamang’s stay at their hotel. “I don’t remember his face,”
said Trikasno. Four cleaning service staff also did not
recognize Wamang, when presented with his picture some five
years after he says he stayed at the hotel.[12]
One afternoon at Hotel Djody, according to Wamang, a
stranger approached him and Anggaibak. “I hear you are
looking to buy guns”, Wamang quoted the stranger as saying.
Eventually Anggaibak admitted that they were. The
stranger—Captain Hardi Heidi—said that he was an Indonesian
soldier from Surabaya. Eventually Wamang paid for four
additional guns from Hardi Heidi: two AKs and two M-16s. As
with Sergeant Puji, Wamang arranged for Hardi Heidi to keep
the weapons for safe keeping until he was ready to depart
for Timika.[13]
Hardi Heidi introduced Anggaibak and Wamang to Sugiono, an
active duty Kopassus officer who pledged to help transport
the weapons to Timika.[14]
Sugiono and Hardi Heidi had interests similar to Sergeant
Puji’s—they wanted to hear about the activities of Papuan
guerillas around Timika.
On September 21, Wamang visited 40 Papuan delegates, who had
just returned from negotiations with Freeport McMoRan—the
New Orleans based company that operates a mine near Timika
with the largest gold deposit in the world. They were making
a stop in Jakarta and stayed at Hotel Mega Matra. Excited to
see many fellow Amungme leaders, Wamang visited the hotel a
number of times. The leaders were negotiating a profit
sharing deal with Freeport’s management.
Wamang asked many delegates for money. According to delegate
Eltinus Omaleng, Wamang bragged about how he had secured a
shipload of weapons that were ready to be shipped to Papua.[15]
Wamang needed the extra money to transport the weapons.
Janes Natkime gave Wamang 1.5 million Rupiah ($160 USD),
“Five days later he came back to the hotel, saying that the
ship had been rerouted to Aceh.”[16]
Wamang said that he had paid Sugiono nearly 50 million
Rupiah ($5,400 USD)to ship the guns to Timika. After a
chartered boat was loaded with the weapons, Wamang claims
that Sugiono and Hardi Heidi gave him the slip. The ship
motored away with Wamang standing alone on the dock.[17]
Just prior to the boat’s departure, Wamang said that he
overheard a conversation between Hardi Heidi and his wife.
Wamang quoted the wife as saying: “We should sell these in
Aceh.”[18]
After calling associates back in Timika for more money,
Wamang traveled alone back to Timika on the Kelimutu
passenger ship.[19]
Wamang arrived in Timika with only the bullets that Sergeant
Puji had given him.[20]
His extensive contacts with Sergeant Puji, with Sugiono,
with Hardi Heidi, and with Mochtar had given him moments of
hope. But his mission to obtain guns had ultimately failed.
Instead, Wamang revealed his plans to launch an assault to
these Indonesian officers and gave them intelligence about
the activities of fellow Papuan guerillas.
THE AMBUSH
In early August 2002, Wamang started out on foot with at
least six other men, including Johny Kacamol, Yulianus
Deikme and Elias Kwalik, from a jungle camp near Kali
Kopi[21].
Their destination was the main road that connects
Tembagapura, the mining town of Freeport McMoRan, to Timika,
a sprawling urban center in the lowlands.
According to Wamang, the journey took nearly
three weeks. Wamang, and his men, were preparing to launch
an armed assault on Indonesian military troops traveling on
this road. The group set up a temporary camp in a ravine
below mile 63 of the road.[22]
One of Wamang’s co-conspirators, Hardi
Tsugumol, was also very busy getting ready for “an action”
on the road, according to Deminikus Bebari of the Amungme
Indigenous Council (Lemassa). In the weeks leading up to the
ambush, Tsugumol “amassed food and other supplies,” wrote
Bebari, in a 2002 report prepared for Indonesian police
investigators.[23]
When Hardi Tsugumol was a boy, growing up in
a highland village, he wanted to be a soldier.[24]
As an adult, Tsugumol cultivated relationships with
Indonesian soldiers stationed in Timika. In the lead up to
the ambush Tsugumol “contacted his friends in the military
to buy ammunition—300 bullets for 600,000 rupiah, via his
friends who were in the Indonesian special forces,” wrote
Bebari.[25]
On Saturday 31 August 20002, just before
dawn, three men, including Tsugumol, were “picked up at the
Kwamki Lama neighborhood by a white Toyota Land Cruiser from
Freeport’s Emergency Planning Operation division,” wrote
Bebari.[26]
The EPO is a Freeport division that provides logistical,
transportation and communication supports for the more than
3,000 Indonesian security personnel stationed in the area.[27]
Tsugumol, declined to reveal the identity of the vehicle’s
driver, saying that he has to protect his “friend.” He only
admitted that they had traveled along the Timika-Tembagapura
road, past five checkpoints, that morning.[28]
The 79-mile road has 14 military posts manned by various
units such as Kostrad army reserves, the Marines, the Air
Force’s Paskhas elite unit, the Army Battalion 752, the
Army’s Cavalry, Brimob (Mobil Brigade) police troops as well
as the infamous Kopassus special operations forces.
Decky Murib, a Papuan man who works as a
military informant, said that ten soldiers picked him up at
Hotel Serayu in Timika at 8 am that same day. Murib often
accompanied Indonesian officers in their operations. He said
that he was surprised to see Kopassus Captain Margus Arifin
leading this group. “He was supposed to be in Bandung,” said
Murib. Formerly, Margus had been the Kopassus liaison
officer at Freeport’s EPO office. Murib later told police
investigators that Margus brought him in a car with license
plate number 609 through the Freeport checkpoints and
dropped him, with four solders at mile 62 of the Tembagapura
road. Margus reportedly continued north along the road with
the remaining soldiers.[29]
Margus Arifin denied Murib’s testimony, saying that he was
in Bandung that day. Kopassus commander Major General
Sriyanto Muntrasan told Tempo that Margus’s signatures
showed he was in a Bandung military course.
Freeport operates its check points to
register every car and person traveling along the road.[30]
Workers have to show their employee ID cards at the
checkpoints. Locals have to show special permits issued by
Freeport’s Community Liaison Office. There are also special
Freeport-issued visitor cards. “Only the soldiers refuse to
report at the checkpoints,” said Lexy Lintuuran, Freeport’s
corporate security chief.[31]
According to Linturan, a car with the license plate 609, the
car Decky Murib claimed he was in, passed through the
checkpoints in the morning of the attack.[32]
That morning a group of school teachers from
the Tembagapura International School, went on a picnic
around mile 62 of the road. The rugged terrain around this
high-elevation section of the road is covered by old-growth
cloud forest. Patsy Spier, who was part of this picnic with
10 others, said that it was rainy and foggy. “We ended up
leaving the picnic early,” said Spier.[33]
The teachers traveled in two white Toyota
Land Cruisers. Rick Spier, her husband, drove the first SUV
with four colleagues riding as passengers. Ted Burgon, the
school’s principal, sat next to Rick Spier.
The first shots, fired by a sniper at Rick Spier’s SUV as it
traveled down the road, were deadly. The windshield of Rick
Spier and Ted Burgon’s car exploded. Within moments they
both sustained fatal wounds.[34]
Wamang claims to not know who fired these first shots. In
the initial burst of gunfire it was hard to tell who was
shooting. “With everyone shooting, you can’t hear well ....
If I had shot first, then I would have been able to tell,”
recalled Wamang.[35]
Wamang’s group was a rag-tag band of teenagers and men with
limited weapons training.[36]
They wore black shorts, black t-shirts, and black plastic
headbands. They were all barefoot.[37]
Patsy Spier traveled in the second car driven by Ken Balk.
She sat next to Bambang Riwanto, her Javanese colleague.[38]
Suddenly, in the fog, Patsy Spier saw her husband’s car
stopped by the side of the road. Another car was speeding
towards her on the opposite side of the road. “They ran
Rick’s car off of the road,” Spier thought. Turning around
in her seat to get a good look at its license plate, Spier
felt a sharp stab in her side. She had been shot. The
windshield shattered. Blood splattered all over the SUV
interior.[39]
“I did not see the shooters,” said Patsy Spier. Ken Balk, in the same car as Spier, saw a pair of
black army boots underneath a truck, some 20 yards away from
where their vehicle had come to a stop.[40]
Three other vehicles, a yellow Mac truck and two Canadian
Pacific dump trucks, were also riddled with bullets.[41]
“All of us were shot, wounded. Bambang was
laying on top of me, bleeding. I was worried about my
husband but the shooting just continued,” said Spier.[42]
Bambang died in the attack. Among the 11 people who were
wounded in the attack, there were three Indonesian drivers.
The two drivers who were seriously injured, Loudwyk
Worotikan and Johannes Bawan, were employees of a Freeport
contract company. Mastur, the third driver, sustained light
injuries.
Another pick up truck was also shot but its
driver, Daud Tandirerung, managed to speed away from the
crime scene. Two colleagues, Yohan Jikwa and Kamame Moom,
were riding with Tandirerung. They told investigators that
they saw “two men in ski masks.”[43]
According to witnesses, and a reconstruction by police
investigators, the shooting lasted between 30 to 45 minutes.[44]
“We weren’t there very long. We immediately
retreated,” Wamang told us. We asked him, “Were you there
thirty minutes?” “No,” he said, “30 minutes is way too
long.”[45]
They did not approach the stopped cars.
As Wamang’s group left the scene, the other unknown
gunmen continued shooting. No one followed as they beat a
hasty retreat on foot.[46]
Andrew Neale, a Freeport expatriate, came
upon the scene from the north.[47]
Neale jammed his vehicle and drove back to the Kostrad
military post about 500 meters away at mile 64. According to
Lexy Lintuuran, Freeport’s security chief, the Kostrad
company stationed there “has more than 100 soldiers.”[48]
Why didn’t the Kostrad soldiers come sooner? Did they hear
the 30-45 minutes of gunfire?
When the soldiers finally arrived at the
scene, the attackers melted away. The soldiers briefly fired
their guns. Then the shooting abruptly stopped. “I assumed
that the shooters left after the TNI came,” said Spier,
using the acronym of the Indonesian military. She remembered
a soldier, dressed in full camouflage and black boots, who
stood over her, glaring down.[49]
Victims were immediately transported to a nearby hospital
and soon evacuated to bigger hospitals in Australia and
Indonesia.
A total of thirteen guns were used in this
assault on the five cars, according to
a leaked ballistics
report issued by the Police Central Forensic Laboratory (Pusat
Laboratorium Forensik Polri) on 19 December 2002: five
M16s, six SS1s, and two Mausers.[50]
“We had one M16, one SS1, and one Mauser,” Wamang told us.[51]
Wamang’s account of his weaponry is consistent with the
evidence presented by chief prosecutor Anita Asterida: his
group carried a total of three guns.[52]
The prosecution did not account for the ten other guns.
Ch. Syafriani, one of the Lab’s ballistics
experts, reiterated the data contained in the original
ballistics report on 29 September 2006 in the Central
Jakarta district court —the lab analyzed 30 bullets of 5.56
caliber, 77 bullet fragments, 94 bullet casings of 5.56
caliber, 7 bullet casings of 7.62 caliber.[53]
A total of 208 bullets, shells, or fragments were recovered
from the crime scene.[54]
Of the six magazines given to Wamang by Sergeant Puji, he
claims that only 1½ magazines (about 45 bullets of 5.56
caliber) were used by his men that day.
Wamang told us that other gunmen were
present.[55]
He saw other men shooting into the cars, but he could not
clearly identify them. “The testimony of Anton Wamang and
others at the crime scene is clear and consistent: there was
a second group of shooters,” said Paula Makabory, a human
rights worker in Timika who repeatedly interviewed Wamang
over the course of three years.
Evidence of a second group of shooters was not considered by
the Indonesian courtroom that recently found Wamang guilty.
An Indonesian police investigation questioned 30 soldiers,
44 civilians, and conducted extensive forensic research.
These police investigators found “a strong possibility” that
there were Indonesian military shooters.[56]
Why would the Indonesian military stage an
attack at the Freeport mine? One theory is linked to the
fact that Freeport paid a total of US$5.6 million in 2002
for “support costs for government-provided security.”[57]
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 imposed new reporting
requirements on U.S. companies in the wake of the Enron
corporate accounting scandal. After this measure was passed
into law, Freeport was forced to disclose their payments to
the Indonesian military. Under public scrutiny, Freeport
began reducing official and unofficial payments to
Indonesian security forces.[58]
The August 2002 attack may have been orchestrated by the
Indonesian military in a bid to convince Freeport of their
continued need for security.
On 1 September, one day after the attack,
the body of “Mr. X” appeared near the crime scene. Senior
Indonesian military officers claimed that their troops had
shot one of the Papuan guerrilla attackers. Second Class
Corporal Wayan, an Indonesian soldier with Satgas Pam 515
Kostrad, claimed to have shot Mr. X while patrolling a
mountain near the crime scene at 11:40 am.[59]
At 1:30 pm senior military and police
officials—including Papua police chief Major General I Made Mangku Pastika—arrived at the side of the road where
Corporal Wayan was standing with the body.[60]
There were no blood stains on the ground near the body. The
body was sent to the Tembagapura hospital at 3:30. Dr. Kunto
Rahardjo conducted an autopsy. He concluded that Mr. X had
been killed more than six hours before he was examined at
the hospital. Mr. X had not eaten for more than 12 hours
before his death. He had suffered from a severe intestinal
worm infection and had a condition called hydrocele which
caused his testicles to swell to 17 cm in diameter.[61]
Corporal Wayan claims that Mr. X was standing on a small ledge
approximately ½ meter in width on the side of a steep cliff
when he shot and killed him. A police reconstruction
conducted on 10 September 2002 found no blood stains on the
ledge, at the base of the cliff, nor along the route where
Corporal Wayan and his patrol members reportedly dragged the
body. The Timika-Tembagapura road is 78 meters from the base
of the cliff. This rugged terrain is covered with dense
roots and loose rocks.[62]
The police reconstruction deemed Wayan’s story implausible.[63]
The body reportedly fell 8 meters off the cliff, yet did not
have any broken bones. A report by Indonesian forensics
experts found that the blood type of Mr. X was “O” and that
dirt and leaves from the site where Wayan claimed to have
shot the man did not contain any blood of this type.[64]
THE COVER UP
Elsham Papua, a human rights
group which was involved in the Timika investigation, issued
a preliminary report on 26 September 2002. It presented
evidence “suggesting the shooting was carried out by
Indonesian military personnel or groups facilitated by the
TNI.”[65]
The BBC, Radio Australia, and many Papuan newspapers covered
the report. Two days later, the Indonesian military
announced that it was to sue Elsham. A court summons arrived
in November, announcing that John Rumbiak and Yohanis Bonai,
respectively the supervisor and director of Elsham, were
being sued for libelous statements.[66]
Thugs raided Elsham Papua’s
Jakarta office on 10 October 2002.[67]
“During the raid, the men seized documents and computer
diskettes containing Elsham reports on the August ambush,”
wrote the Jakarta Post.[68]
Yohanis
Bonai’s wife, Elsje, and other members of their extended
family, were attacked by unknown gunmen while travelling by
car near the border between Indonesia and Papua New Guinea
on 28 December 2002. Elsje Bonay was shot in both legs.[69]
She survived the attack, but after repeated surgeries she
still has difficulty walking. Tempo magazine ran a
story with the headline: “Shooting of Papuan Human Rights
Activist’s Family May Be Related to Timika Incident.”[70]
Brigadier General Raziman Tarigan, the second in command of
the Papua police, headed an Indonesian police investigation.
Tarigan worked closely with Elsham investigators.[71]
Tarigan told reporters that the 13 guns used in the
attack were the types of weapons issued to soldiers
stationed in the area.[72]
“Only the military and
Freeport workers pass through the area,” Tarigan was quoted
as saying by Koran Tempo.[73]
Separately, I Made Mangku Pastika, Tarigan’s immediate
superior, told three aides to Coordinating Minister on
Political and Security Affairs Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in a
meeting in the Timika police station:
“Gentlemen, this country belongs to all of us. If you do
something for the sake of the country and the nation, well,
please tell us first. So we’re not all in trouble.”[74]
Yudhoyono is now Indonesia’s President. Saul
Tahapary, a Freeport security consultant, was party to this
conversation, recalled that Pastika was upset with attempts
by the military to cover up their own actions.
Soon
Tarigan and Pastika were transferred off of the
investigation to new assignments elsewhere in Indonesia.
Pastika was assigned to investigate the Bali bombing that
killed more than 200 people.
Following the reports by
Tarigan and Pastika, Indonesia’s Central Military Police
(Puspom TNI) sent a team to conduct a “reconstruction.”
According to Richard Saferstien’s text on criminology,
Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science, a
murder reconstruction involves answering a series of
questions: (1) was there more than one person involved? (2)
how was the victim killed? (3) were there actions taken to
cover up what actually took place?[75]
The Indonesian military reconstruction did not rigorously
attempt to answer any of these three questions. In fact,
this “reconstruction” itself is further evidence of a cover
up.
Decky Murib, the military
informant who claimed to be near the scene of the crime,
told us that he was threatened and intimidated by Indonesian
soldiers on 28 December 2002, the day of the reconstruction.[76]
In the months prior to this day, Murib had worked with
police investigators to identify Kopassus soldiers whom he
alleged were at the crime scene: Captain Margus Arifin,
First Lieutenant Wawan Suwandi, Second Class Sergeant I
Wayan Suradnya, and First Class Private Jufri Uswanas.[77]
Murib told us that he had changed his story as a result of
threats by Captain Margus on the day of the reconstruction.[78]
Captain Margus told Murib to not participate in the
reconstruction. Murib decided to go into hiding.[79]
On 28 December 2002 at 11:30
am, the Indonesian military reconstruction team traveled by
bus to mile 58. Deminikus Bebari of Lemassa and Albert
Bolang of the Legal Aid Institute were accompanying the team
as outside observers. Bebari protested, saying that mile 58
was not the place where Murib claimed to have heard the
shots. Murib initially told police investigators that he had
heard gun shots from his position in between mile 61 and 62.[80]
At this spot there was a large pole, shipping containers,
and a place to sit.[81]
The team then traveled approximately 500 meters up the road
and positioned themselves under some umbrellas by the
roadside. The pole and shipping containers, from Murib’s
testimony, were nowhere in sight. Over four miles of road
and the Hanekam tunnel separated Bebari from the site where
Murib said he heard the shots.[82]
But the military reconstruction team refused to travel
further up the road.
Albert Bolang traveled with a
separate team, a Brimob mobile police unit, to the site of
the shooting at mile 63. Once both teams were in place, 20
bullets were shot in an automatic burst. Radio contact was
made between the two groups. The reconstruction team and
Bebari did not hear the gunshots. Brigadier General
Hendarji, who headed the military reconstruction team,
confronted Bebari as they stood on the road immediately
after the shooting experiment. Bebari recounted Hendarji
saying “Since you did not hear any gunshots then Murib’s
testimony about the Timika shooting was a lie.”[83]
Deminikus Bebari told us
“Decky might be a drunkard and an opportunist but he was at
mile 62. How could we test whether he had heard the shots or
not when I was placed four miles away from his position?”[84]
In January 2003, Decky Murib was flown to Jakarta by
Indonesian military officials.[85]
Major General Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin, the Indonesian military
spokesman, announced on 14 January 2003: “Decky Murib lied.”[86]
The
reconstruction took place at the height of President
Megawati Sukarnoputri’s effort to restore military ties with
the United States. Her chief security minister, Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono, told reporters, “There are some things
that do not match between the investigation results of the
police and the results of the TNI internal investigation
into the case.” Yudhoyono called for a “synchronization” of
the two investigations at “the political level.”[87]
Recovering from her gunshot wounds, and mourning her lost
husband, Patsy Spier closely followed the news as police
investigators implicated Indonesian military troops in the
attack. When the Indonesian military took over the
investigation, and promptly exonerated themselves, Spier
began her campaign for justice. After making a few
tear-choked phone calls to the offices of Washington policy
makers, she learned that the US government was poised to
fund the controversial International Military Education and
Training (IMET) program for Indonesian soldiers. “I just, I
just couldn’t believe it,” Spier told ABC reporters, “If the
Indonesian police had implicated the Indonesian military,
why would my government want to give money to that
military?”[88]
The Bush administration made military aid to Indonesia a
high priority in the post-September 11th era.
Indonesia is the most populous Muslim nation in the world.
Following the Santa Cruz massacre in East Timor, the U.S.
Congress had blocked military aid to Indonesia in 1992. All
military assistance to Indonesia had been cut by the Clinton
administration in response to the bloodbath during the 1999
independence referendum in East Timor.[89]
When Spier first came to Capitol Hill in early 2003, human
rights groups—Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and
the East Timor Action Network—were losing a battle to keep
restrictions on Indonesian military financing.
Spier’s presentations to lawmakers were well received. She
secured meetings with some of the top U.S. government
officials: Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, FBI
director Robert Mueller, key Senators, and Congressmen.[90]
Spier also met FBI agents Paul Myers, Brad Dierdorf, and Ron
Eowan, men who she came to see as her personal “guardian
angels.”[91]
Initially FBI agents were only permitted short visits to
Timika. All their interviews of witnesses were, at first,
conducted in the presence of Indonesian minders.[92]
“We were objective,” said Dierdorf during the interrogation
of a witness on 24 February 2005. “Our gut feeling initially
leaned away from Papuans,” Dierdorf said. The Australian
published a sensational headline on 28 October 2002,
“FBI: Army Lied about Papua Ambush.”[93]
This story discussed the planting of false evidence and
removal of other evidence from the scene of the killing.
Despite repeated high-level requests from the U.S.
government, including a personal appeal by President Bush,
the FBI had continual difficulties in gaining access to
witnesses and material evidence.[94]
Spier saw that restricting funds for the Indonesian military
would provide a financial incentive for cooperation. Sen.
Russell D. Feingold (D-Wis.) later sponsored an amendment to
prohibit “normalization” of the U.S.-Indonesia military
relationship. Sen. Wayne Allard (R-CO) sponsored a parallel
amendment that prohibited the release of $600,000 in IMET
military training funds. Both amendments passed in October
2003. Only “full cooperation” with the FBI in its
investigation into the Timika ambush would prompt Washington
to release these funds to the Indonesian military.
These congressional measures stymied Bush administration
efforts to restore full military ties with Indonesia. Edmund
McWilliams, formerly a U.S. Embassy political counselor in
Jakarta, told us, “The FBI investigation, once it was
finally launched, proceeded in the constraining political
context of an administration policy which was pressing for
rapid expansion of U.S.-Indonesian military ties. I
personally observed FBI reluctance to accept or pursue
information offered to it that pointed to Indonesian
military involvement in the killings.”[95]
Over a two-year period, Elsham’s John Rumbiak presented the
FBI with specific details about Wamang’s ties to the
Indonesian military.[96]
Senator Joseph R. Biden submitted written questions about
this case to Dr. Condoleezza Rice during her January 19,
2005, confirmation hearing for the position of U.S.
Secretary of State. Dr. Rice responded, “Although the
investigation is not complete, the FBI has uncovered no
evidence indicating TNI involvement in the Timika murders.”
Did FBI investigators brief administration officials about
Wamang’s trip to Jakarta and his extensive contacts with
military agents? Were U.S. leaders informed about eyewitness
reports of a second group of shooters?
Decky Murib was brought as a
prosecution witness in the defamation suit against Elsham on
31 March 2004 in Jayapura, the capital of Papua. During the
course of the trial, Murib stayed in the personal guest
quarters of the Indonesian military commander for Papua. On
14 April 2004, the Elsham legal defense team staged a
walk-out because the judges would not give them the
opportunity to cross-examine Murib. The Elsham defense team
was finally given the opportunity to question Murib on 5 May
2004, but Murib refused to answer any questions. On three
separate occasions, Murib made death threats to Bebari, the
human rights worker, in front of the court. The Elsham
defense team asked that the judges take note of the threats.
If bodily harm should come to their witness, the Elsham
defense team observed, Murib would be suspected as the
perpetrator.
Approximately one month later
Bebari’s house was ransacked by an angry mob. A group of men
wielding axes entered the house and grabbed Bebari’s wife,
Nirmala Ohee, and their three children. The men destroyed
books, clothes, and other personal property. They threatened
to kill Nirmala Ohee and the children.[97]
On 24 June 2004, U.S.
Attorney General John Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert
Mueller announced that Antonius Wamang had been indicted for
the murders at mile 63. The indictment alleged that Wamang
was a guerilla fighter seeking independence from Indonesia.
The U.S. Department of Justice did not exonerate the
Indonesian military, but the Indonesian military
subsequently claimed exoneration.
Less than one week after
Wamang’s indictment, the Jayapura district court found
Elsham guilty of libel. The rights group was fined 50
million rupiah ($5,300 USD) on 30 June 2004 and ordered to
publicly apologize through national print and television
media.[98]
Following the indictment, the U.S. Congress dropped
provisions that tied military education programs in
Indonesia to cooperation in the Timika investigation. Yet,
Indonesian authorities failed to capture Wamang. Willy
Mandowen, a Papuan politician, began talking with the FBI
and U.S. government officials about negotiating Wamang’s
surrender. He sent an e-mail to a public discussion forum
for Papuan activists on 7 December 2005: “Tomorrow at
Capitol Hill, Washington D.C., we are meeting with important
representatives of the U.S. Congress who are giving full
support to help us resolve our problems in West Papua.”[99]
Congressional staffers talked with Mandowen about the
possibility that FBI agents might bring Wamang to stand
trial in America.[100]
With Willy Mandowen’s help,
Paul Myers and Ron Eowan of the FBI coordinated an 11
January 2006 “meeting” at a small hotel in Timika called
Amole Dua.[101]
Invitations to this meeting were sent to suspects via
Reverend Isak Onawame, a local church leader who is known
internationally for his work on human rights. The
Washington Post reported that the FBI pledged to
transport the suspects to the U.S. for trial.[102]
At the hotel, the two FBI agents told the 12 men attending
the meeting, including Antonius Wamang and Reverend Onawame,
to get into the back of a medium-sized truck. The agents
reportedly promised to drive the men to the Timika airport
and fly them out of Indonesia. Instead of driving to the
airport, Myers and Eowan dropped the men at a local police
station where Indonesian troops with the elite Brimob unit
were waiting.[103]
Reverend Onawame was strip searched, deprived of sleep, and
interrogated at the police station along with the other
detainees. Another detainee, an elderly man named Jairus
Kibak, says he was hit by an Indonesian interrogator on his
forehead. Four of the men, who were never charged with any
crime, were released the next day.[104]
Reverend Onawame was not released. Denny Yomaki of Elsham
Papua, who met with Reverend Onawame in prison, said,
“Interrogators extracted a false confession from Reverend
Onawame. He told the police that he gave Wamang food.”
Antonius Wamang has repeatedly said that Reverend Isak
Onawame was not involved in the crime. “It’s fine if I am
held responsible,” Wamang said, “but, the Reverend didn’t
even help us with logistics.”[105]
The prisoners were soon
transferred to the Indonesian Police Headquarters’ detention
center in Jakarta. They were not given their own cells to
sleep in. Instead they all shared the prison "TV room."
Hardi Tsugumol, who was charged with providing Wamang with
logistical support, developed serious heart problems in June
2006. His medical treatment was delayed until late August,
when he underwent heart surgery. Tsugumol also suffered from
hepatitis and HIV/AIDS. One of the prisoners’ lawyers,
Riando Tambunan, repeatedly asked the court to attend to
Tsugumol’s health problems. But, visits from doctors were
infrequent.
Judicial proceedings in
Indonesia differ markedly from the United States, where
Wamang thought he would be tried when he surrendered to the
FBI. In Indonesia evidence is not evaluated by a jury, but
instead by a government appointed team. The role of
"prosecutor" and "judge" (hakim) are not easily
distinguished. In Indonesia, hakim who do not toe the
government line have been assassinated. Evidence of
Indonesian military involvement in the murder was not
presented to the court by the defense team who represented
Wamang and the other defendants. The defense team did not
have funding available to conduct proper discovery research.
Antonius Wamang was sentenced
to life in prison by a Jakarta court on 7 November 2006. Two
other defendants, teenagers Johny Kacamol and Yulianus
Deikme, were sentenced to seven years in jail, while the
other four, including Reverend Onawame, Hardi Tsugumol and
the two church workers, were sentenced to 18 months.[106]
Tsugumol died on December 1st.
No charges have been brought against Sergeant Puji, the
police officer who Wamang has fingered as supplier of the
bullets used in the attack. Evidence of the reported
involvement of Kopassus military agents—Captain Margus
Arifin, First Lieutenant Wawan Suwandi, Second Class
Sergeant I Wayan Suradnya, and First Class Private Jufri
Uswanas—has not been heard by a court of law. Agus
Anggaibak, who reportedly inspired Wamang’s attack and
helped him get bullets, is now a member of the government
regional assembly in Timika.
The FBI does not yet consider this murder
case closed.[107]
Despite the inconclusive outcome of this investigation, the
Bush administration has launched aggressive new military aid
programs for Indonesia. Earlier last year a new Pentagon
program was announced that will provide up to $19 million in
additional funds for building Indonesian military capacity.
The same day that Wamang was sentenced to life, Washington
signaled a “new era of military co-operation” with
Indonesia.[108]
***
This report is based on
interviews with Antonius Wamang, Decky Murib, Patsy Spier
and more than 50 other sources in Timika, Jayapura, Jakarta
and Washington DC. It is sponsored by the Joyo Indonesia
News in New York and Pantau media group in Jakarta.
S. Eben Kirksey is completing his
doctorate at the University of California in Santa Cruz
about the idea of freedom (merdeka) in Papua. Andreas
Harsono is a Pantau journalist, currently writing his book,
“From Sabang to Merauke: Debunking the Myth of Indonesian
Nationalism.”
[1] Antonius Wamang, tape-recorded
interview with SEK on 25 March 2005 in Kwamki Lama,
Timika; interview with AH on 8-9 October 2006 in
Jakarta.
[2]
S. Sularto,
'Mereka yang Terpaksa Mengungsi', Kompas
(Jakarta), 28 November 1977, pp. 7-8; Carmel
Budiardjo and Liem Sioe Liong, West Papua,
pp. 119-20; Robin Osborne, Indonesia's Secret War,
p. 145.
[3]
Budiardjo and
Liem, West Papua, pp. 119-24.
[4] Wamang, 25 March 2005; John
Rumbiak, SEK interview, 24 February 2005, Washington
DC.
[5] Janes Natkime, AH interview 6
November 2006. Original quote: “Agus Anggaibak
yang atur, lobby tentara, Agus yang setel semua,
atur uang.”
[6] An activist attended the
meeting and copied
the specifications of the gun down in his notebook.
SEK saw this notebook, 24 March 2005 in Timika.
[7] Wamang, 25 March 2005; John
Rumbiak, 24 February 2005.
[8] Wamang, 25 March 2005, Timika;
Deminikus Bebari interview with AH 13 October 2006
in Jakarta.
[9] Wamang, 25 March 2005, Timika.
[10] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika.
[11] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika.
[12] Herry Blaponte and Mahmud
Trikasno, AH interview, 6 November 2006. Police
chief commissioner Dzainal Syarief, who headed the
Indonesian police investigation on the Mile 63 case,
declined to comment for this story. AH showed
Wamang’s photo to five other hotel employees. None
remembered his face. They said they have many
guests. The guest book does not show either Wamang’s
name nor his alias P. Amug.
[13] Wamang, 25 March 2005, Timika
[14] John Rumbiak, SEK interview,
24 February 2005. Wamang, 25 March 2005.
[15] Eltinus Omaleng, AH interview
in Jakarta, 6 November 2006.
[16] Like Papua, Aceh is an
Indonesian province seeking independence from
Indonesia. It declared independence in December
1976. Aceh guerilla fighters regularly attacked
Indonesian military positions. In 2001, some of the
worst attacks happened in Aceh. Arms circulated
easily in Aceh. Only in August 2005, the Free Acheh
guerillas agreed to sign a peace agreement with
Jakarta.
[17] Wamang, 25 March 2005; 8-9
October 2006.
[18] Wamang, 25 March 2005; 8-9
October 2006. Indonesian original: “Harus kami
jual ke Aceh.”
[19] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika.
[20] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika.
[21] Interview Antonius Wamang
with SEK on 25 March 2005, Timika and with AH on 9
October 2006, Jakarta. Also Yulianus Deikme with AH
9 October 2006 in Jakarta.
[22] Wamang, 25 March 2005, Timika
and 9 October 2006, Jakarta.
[23] Deminikus Bebari, “Kesaksiaan
Saudara Hardi Tsugumol Tentang Pelaku Penembakan di
Mill 63.”
[24] Hardi Tsugumol, 22 March
2005, interview with SEK in Timika.
[25] Bebari, “Kesaksiaan Saudara
Hardi Tsugumol Tentang Pelaku Penembakan di Mill
63,” Original reads: Hardy Tsugumol sangat sibuk
dengan persiapan rencana aksi damai di sekitar
terowongan ruas jalan Timika-Tembagapura, menyangkut
: BAMA (Bahan Makanan) serta kelengkapan lainnya.
Menghubungi teman-temannya anggota (Militer) untuk
membeli Amunisi yang berjumlah 300 Butir, dengan
harga Rp, 600.000 melaui salah satu temannya yang
anggota Kopassus.” AH checked this information
with Bebari in Jakarta, 13 November 2006.
[26] Bebari, “Kesaksiaan Saudara
Hardi Tsugumol Tentang Pelaku Penembakan di Mill
63,” Original reads: Mereka dijemput oleh Mobil
PT. Freeport Indonesia yang digunakan oleh
Department Army (EPO) di Kompleks Pompa Dua Kwamki
lama.
[27] AH interview with Lexy
Lintuuran and Saul Tahapary, respectively PT
Freeport Indonesia’s senior manager on corporate
security and security consultant, in Jakarta on 6
November 2006.
[28] Kwamki Lama neighborhood is
located near Timika. One has to pass five
checkpoints manned by Freeport’s security and the
Indonesian military to reach Mile 63. The five
checkpoints include Mile 28, Mile 32, Mile 34, Mile
50 (one of the strictest) and Mile 58.
[29] “Kesaksian Deky Murib di
Polda Papua Tentang Penembakan di Mile 62-63
Tembagapura”, Polda, Jayapura, 18 September 2002.
“Saran Tindak Lanjut BAP Saksi Sdr Decky Murib (TBO
Kopassus)”, Timika, 28 September 2002.
[30] PT Freeport Indonesia
Corporate Communications Department, Pedoman
Kunjungan, Jakarta, August 2005. This manual
prints a map of the mining area with the military
posts or “Milpos.”
[31] Lintuuran, AH interview in
Jakarta, 6 November 2006. Original quote: “Mereka
seenaknya saja, mereka masa bodoh. Yang tidak bisa
kita kendalikan hanya mobil-mobil keamanan.”
[32] Lintuuran, AH interview in
Jakarta, 6 November 2006.
[33] Patsy Spier in AH interview
in Jakarta, 13 October 2006.
[34] Dana Priest, “Nightmare and a
Mystery,” Sunday, June 22, 2003; Page A01.
[35] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika. Original reads: Kalo bunyi sama-sama,
berarti tidak bisa dengar... Kalau saya duluan
berarti, itu bisa.
[36] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika.
[37] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika. Surat Dakwaan, Kejaksaan Negeri Jakarta
Pusat, Juni 2006
[38] Patsy Spier in AH interview
in Jakarta, 13 October 2006. Patsy drew the seating
positions inside the two vehicles. It is consistent
with previous media reports, such as, “Freeport
victim's quest for answers leads to Australia” in
the Sidney Morning Herald, 27 February 2003.
[39] Patsy Spier in AH interview
in Jakarta, 13 October 2006.
[40] Priest, “A Nightmare, and a
Mystery,” page A01.
[41] Dudon Satiaputra, “Rahasia:
Laporan Hasil Sementara Pemeriksaan TKP Penembakan
Kary. PT. Freeport,” Jakarta, 19 December 2002.
[42] Patsy Spier in AH interview
in Jakarta, 13 October 2006.
[43] Bebari, “Kesaksian Saudara
Yonan Jikwa dan Kamame Mom Tentang Aksi Pnembakan di
Mill 63 Ruas Jalan Timika-Tembagapura.”
[44] Patsy Spier in AH interview
in Jakarta, 13 October 2006.
[45] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika.
[46] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika.
[47] Priest, “A Nightmare, and a
Mystery,” page A01.
[48] Lintuuran, AH interview in
Jakarta, 6 November 2006.
[49] Priest, “A Nightmare, and a
Mystery,” page A01.
[50] Dudon Satiaputra, “Rahasia:
Laporan Hasil Sementara Pemeriksaan TKP Penembakan
Kary. PT. Freeport,” Jakarta, 19 December 2002.
[51] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika.
[52] Surat Dakwaan Antonius
Wamang, Kejaksaan Negeri Jakarta Pusat, Juni 2006
[53] Dudon Satiaputra, “Rahasia:
Laporan Hasil Sementara Pemeriksaan TKP Penembakan
Kary. PT. Freeport,” Jakarta, 19 December 2002.
[54] Dudon Satiaputra, “Rahasia:
Laporan Hasil Sementara Pemeriksaan TKP Penembakan
Kary. PT. Freeport,” Jakarta, 19 December 2002.
[55] Wamang, 25 March 2005,
Timika. 8-9 October 2006.
[56] Quoted in Priest, “A
Nightmare, and a Mystery,” page A01.
[57] Quoted in “Paying for
Protection: The Freeport Mine and the Indonesian
Security Forces”, a report by Global Witness, July
2005, p. 4. Captain Margus Arifin, the leader of the
rogue soldiers at the scene of the crime according
to Decky Murib, received USD$46,000 in March 2002
according to Global Witness.
[58] “Paying for Protection: The
Freeport Mine and the Indonesian Security Forces”, a
report by Global Witness, July 2005, p. 4.
[59] “Ringkasan Laporan,” Elsham
Papua, 14 August 2003.
[60] “Ringkasan Laporan,” Elsham
Papua, 14 August 2003.
[61] “Peristiwa 1 September 2002,”
internal document, Polda Papua.
[62] “Ringkasan Laporan,” Elsham
Papua, 14 August 2003.
[63] “Peristiwa 1 September 2002,”
internal document, Polda Papua, Original reads: “MR.
X diduga bukan TSK pelaku yg sebenarnya di TKP Mile
62.” “Audiensi Team Investigasi Els-Ham Papua Dgn
Polda Papua,” Kantor Polres M-32, Mimika, 11
September 2002.
[64] Dudon Satiaputra, “Rahasia:
Laporan Hasil Sementara Pemeriksaan TKP Penembakan
Kary. PT. Freeport,” Jakarta, 19 December 2002.
[65] Elsham Papua, “What Happened
at Freeport”, September 26, 2002.
[66] Andi Imran to Yohanis Bonai,
“Somasi”, 15 November 2002.
[67] Alberth Rumbekwan, “Kronologi
Peristiwa Pembongkaran Kantor Perwakilan Elsham
Papua di Jakarta”, sent to
westpapua@topica.com on 16 October 2002.
[68] “Office of Rights Group
Probing Papua Shootings Attacked”, The Jakarta
Post, 28 October 2002.
[69] Nethy Dharma Somba, “Wife of
Human Rights Activist Shot at Papua-PNG Border”, The
Jakarta Post, 29 December 2002.
[70] “Shooting of Papuan Human
Rights Activist’s Family May Be Related to Timika
Incident”, Tempo Interactive, 28 December 2003
20:54:13 WIB.
[71] Soal Penembakan Di Timika
Belum Ada Bukti Keterlibatan TNI, 09 Jan 2003,
Available online: http://www.tni.mil.id/news.php?q=dtl&id=232
[72] Dudon Satiaputra, “Rahasia:
Laporan Hasil Sementara Pemeriksaan TKP Penembakan
Kary. PT. Freeport”, Jakarta, 19 December 2002.
“Police say Indonesian Army Behind Papua Ambush”,
Agence France Presse, 26 December 2002.
[73] Tom Hyland “Police Blame Army
for Papua Ambush”, The Age, 27 December 2002;
“Police say Indonesian Army Behind Papua Ambush”,
Agence France Presse, 26 December 2002.
[74] Interview Saul Tahapary with
AH 6 November 2006 in Jakarta. Original quote:
Mas, negara ini khan punya kita semua. Kalau demi
bangsa dan negara, ya kasih tahu dulu, supaya kita
ini tidak repot semua.” According to Tahapary,
Pastika made this statement to Maj. Gen. M. Yasin (deputi
Menko Polkam bidang Politik Dalam Negeri), Brig.
Gen. Mamat Rachmat and Drs. Yudho of Coordinating
Minister on Security and Politics Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono’s office.
[75] Saferstien, Richard.
Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science,
7th Edition. Prentice Hall (2001), p.
69.
[76] Decky Murib, tape-recorded
interview with SEK on 26 March 2005. Indonesian
original: “Bapa mau temabak saya, silahkan.”
[77] “Saran Tindak Lanjut BAP
Saksi Sdr Decky Murib (TBO Kopassus)”, Timika, 28
September 2002.
[78] Decky Murib, tape-recorded
interview with SEK on 26 March 2005.
[79] Decky Murib, tape-recorded
interview with SEK on 26 March 2005.
[80] “Berita Acara Pemeriksaan (BAP)
Saksi Penembakan di Mile 63 Ruas Jalan Timika-Tembagapura
31 August 2002”, report on interview with Decky
Murib by Lemassa, 7 September 2002.
[81] “Kesaksian Deky Murib di
Polda Papua Tentang Penembakan di Mile 62-63
Tembagapura”, Polda, Jayapura, 18 September 2002.
[82] Deminikus Bebari, “Kronologi
Pemeriksaan Saksi (Decky Murib) oleh Puspom TNI atas
Aksi Penembakan Mill 63 Ruas Jalan
Timika-Tembagapura”, 6 January 2003.
[83] Deminikus Bebari, “Kronologi
Pemeriksaan Saksi (Decky Murib) oleh Puspom TNI atas
Aksi Penembakan Mill 63 Ruas Jalan
Timika-Tembagapura”, 6 January 2003.
[84] Deminikus Bebari interview
with AH, Jakarta, 13 November 2006.
[85] Deminikus Bebari interview
with AH, Jakarta, 13 November 2006.
[87] Tom Hyland “Police Blame Army
for Papua Ambush”, The Age, 27 December 2002.
[88] Anthony Balmain, “Ambush in
Papua”, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 7
August 2004.
[89] Dana Priest, “Nightmare and a
Mystery”, Sunday, June 22, 2003; Page A01.
[90] Tim Shorrock, “Murder, She
Said”, Mother Jones, March-April 2004.
[91] Patsy Spier, personal
communication, Santa Cruz, 22 May 2004.
[92] Dana Priest, “Nightmare and a
Mystery”, Sunday, 22 June 2003; Page A01.
[93] Don Greenlees, “Army Lied
about Papua Ambush”, The Australian, 28
October 2002.
[94] Matthew Moore, “Find Freeport
Killers, Bush Tells Megawati”, Sydney Morning
Herald, 21 December 2002.
[95] Ed McWilliams, “FBI”, e-mail
sent to SEK on 4 November 2006.
[96] John Rumbiak, SEK interview
on 5 February 2005.
[97] Deminikus Bebari, SEK
interview on 24 March 2005 in Timika and 20 July
2005 in Washington D.C.
[98] “Rights Group Loses Libel
Suit, Fined Rp 50m” The Jakarta Post, 1 July
2004.
[99]
Willy Mandowen, “Kami
Tidak Berpesta Atas Keringat Orang!”, sent to
komunitas_papua@yahoogroups.com from
wmandowen@yahoo.com on 7 December 2005.
Indonesian original reads: Sekedar info bahwa esok
08 Desember 2005 pukul 16:00 bertempat di capitol
hill Washington DC kami akan bersua dengan
wakil-wakil penting Kongres AS yang telah memberi
dukungan terhadap penyelesaian secara menyeluruh dan
manusiawi masalah Papua Barat.”
[100] Octovianus Mote, SEK
interview, 11 January 2006.
[101] Ellen Nakashima, “FBI Said
Involved in Arrest of 8 Indonesians”, The
Washington Post, 14 January 2006.
[102] Ellen Nakashima, “FBI Said
Involved in Arrest of 8 Indonesians”, The
Washington Post, 14 January 2006.
[103] Raymond Bonner, “Indonesian
Man Links Military to Shooting of U.S. Teachers”,
The New York Times, 14 January 2006.
[104] Ellen Nakashima, “FBI Said
Involved in Arrest of 8 Indonesians”, The
Washington Post, 14 January 2006.
[105] Wamang interview with AH, 9
October 2006
[106] “Wamang Divonis Seumur Hidup”
Pikiran Rakyat, 8 November 2006.
[107] Patsy Spier e-mail to SEK on
2 December 2006.
[108] “US: Washington Signals New
Era of Military Co-operation”, Radio Australia,
11 November 2006.
see also
A new report looking into
the killings of two US civilians and one
Indonesian near the Timika Freeport mine in
West Papua in 2002 presents strong evidence
of involvement by the Indonesian military in
the killings. Seven West Papuans were
convicted last November for the murders. But
University of California academic Eben
Kirksey and Indonesian journalist and author
Andreas Harsono, are raising concerns about
not only the rule of law in Indonesia but
also the continued power of the military to
act with impunity. They provide fresh
insights from Freeport mine employees and
human rights workers involved in the case
plus new evidence that the Indonesian
military may have known about a planned
attack near the Freeport mine a year before
the deaths. Their views will undoubtedly put
pressure on the Indonesian government to
reopen the case. This exclusive report by
Erica Vowles begins with former US political
secretary to the US Embassy in Jakarta,
Edmund McWilliams, who now works within the
NGO community.
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