Controversy as Sjafrie Given Key Defense
Post
Tiarma Siboro, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
The Ministry of Defense announced on Thursday a major reshuffle
that has seen Indonesian Military (TNI) spokesman Maj. Gen. Sjafrie
Sjamsoeddin take up the key post of secretary-general.
The appointment of Sjafrie, who has been linked to human rights
violations in Jakarta and East Timor, comes as defense minister
Juwono Sudarsono steps up efforts to restore full military ties
between Indonesia and the United States.
A decree on the reshuffle, signed by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
late on Wednesday, also assigned Juwono to take over the work of
outgoing director general of defense planning Mas Widjaja, pending
the appointment of his replacement.
Defense ministry spokesman A. Aziz Manaf, who unveiled the reshuffle,
would not disclose the reason why the President was keeping the
post vacant. Indra Djati Sidi, currently the director general of
primary and secondary education at the Ministry of National Education,
was earlier assumed to be a candidate to fill Widjaja's shoes.
As a result of the reshuffle, Maj. Gen. Dadi Susanto, who is intelligence
assistant to TNI's chief of general affairs Vice Marshal Wartoyo,
was named director general of defense strategy, replacing Maj. Gen.
(ret) Sudrajat. Dadi was the defense attache at the Indonesian Embassy
in the U.S. in 2000.
The director general of defense empowerment at the defense ministry,
Rear Marshal Pitter Watimena, was shifted to the Directorate General
of Procurement, replacing Maj. Gen. (ret) Aqlani Maza. Pitter's
old post went to Brig. Gen. Suryadi.
"The reshuffle was conducted in coordination with the ministry
and TNI headquarters." Aziz said.
Apart from the structural appointments, Juwono also picked businessman
Adnan Gantoe and former National Resilience Institute governor Lt.
Gen. (ret) Sofyan Effendi as his economic and military advisors
respectively.
Juwono will install the new officials on Friday.
Adnan Gantoe is an Aceh native who now runs Morgan Bank, while
Sofyan once served as Aceh military commander.
Rights activist Usman Hamid of the National Commission for Missing
Persons and Victims of Violence (Kontras) said the reshuffle was
a reflection of the government's failure to promote internal reform
within the military.
"It has maintained the impunity for controversial military
officers with poor human rights track records," Usman said,
referring to Sjafrie.
Sjafrie was the Jakarta military commander when the capital was
hit by ethnic riots that led to the ouster of former dictator Soeharto
in May 1998. Thousands died in the rampage. Sjafrie also served
in East Timor when
widespread violence broke out after the autonomy plebiscite in 1999.
Commenting on the criticism, Sjafrie said: "It doesn't matter.
The public will see who is right. The most important thing for me
is that the accusations have never been proven, even outside a court."
He said he would focus on helping the ministry draw up broad national
defense policies.
Deputy chairman of House Commission I for defense Effendy Choirie
expected Sjafrie's appointment would not affect Indonesia's efforts
in seeking the lifting of the U.S. arms embargo, which has been
in effect since the Santa Cruz
cemetery massacre in Dili, East Timor in 1991.
End