More
Pressure Needed to Stop U.S.-TNI Ties
by Karen Orenstein
As the Indonesian military (TNI) continues to commit atrocities,
efforts to restrict U.S.-Indonesia military ties remain as important
as ever.
In Aceh, over 1300 people - the vast majority civilians - have
lost their lives since the Indonesian government declared martial
law there in May 2003. Little is known about conditions in the province,
because Jakarta has effectively sealed off the area. The meager
evidence available indicates dire conditions. The TNI has deployed
U.S.-supplied weapons in Aceh,
including F-16 fighter jets and OV-10 Broncos, aircraft used to
deadly effect in East Timor. An F-16 also recently flew above a
tiny island claimed by both East Timor and Indonesia immediately
after an Indonesian warship bombed the uninhabited outcrop. The
Bush administration has refused to publicly protest the use of U.S.-supplied
equipment in these cases.
In Papua, the TNI is blocking movement of humanitarian assistance
to civilians who fled an April 2003 military operation in the territory's
Central Highlands. The military remains the only holdout in a proposal
supported by Papuan civil society, religious leaders, police, and
the provincial government to transform Papua into a zone of peace.
Rather, the TNI supports division of Papua into smaller provinces.
As it did in East Timor, the TNI sponsors militia in Aceh and Papua.
The notorious Islamic fundamentalist Laskar Jihad militia, responsible
for the deaths of thousands in Maluku through 2001, is reportedly
now operating in Papua.
Additionally, individuals indicted for crimes against humanity
in East Timor have received promotions; some are now in senior positions
overseeing campaigns in Aceh and Papua. A. M. Hendropriyono, who
helped mastermind the 1999 East Timor violence, is now the chief
of Indonesia's National Intelligence Agency and key interlocutor
with the U.S. in the "war on
terror." East Timor's chief of police in 1998-1999, Brig. General
Timbul Silaen, currently heads Papua's police force. And Major General
Adam Damiri, regional military commander in 1999 of the area that
included East Timor, has been promoted to Assistant for Operations
to the Chief of the General Staff with a key role in Aceh. Damiri,
one of the few convicted by Indonesia's court on East Timor, is
not expected to serve a day of his three-year sentence.
Despite these developments, the Bush administration continues to
push to U.S. Pacific Command, testified to Congress in March, "The
TNI appears committed to reform, and there is evidence of positive
change in the military."
The Bush administration lobbied Congress to lift its restriction
on International Military Education and Training (IMET) for 2004,
but failed. IMET is currently banned, contingent on Indonesia's
cooperation with the FBI investigation of the August 2002 ambush
in Timika, Papua, that left one Indonesian and two American teachers
dead and many others wounded.
(Indonesian police and NGO reports implicate the TNI for the murders.)
ETAN is working to further condition IMET on prosecution and appropriate
punishment of those responsible, and on meaningful justice in all
cases of human rights violations in Indonesia and East Timor.
The Bush administration has exploited Indonesia's status as the
world's largest Muslim country to justify efforts to increase military
and police aid in the context of the "war on terror."
Although conditions relating to human rights and military reform
continue to restrict foreign military financing and export licenses
for lethal defense articles to Indonesia, the Pentagon and the State
and Justice Departments are providing millions in counter-terrorism
assistance to the TNI and police through non-transparent mechanisms.