Precedence: bulk


SECRET PLAN BY KOPASSUS AND THE PRO-INDONESIA MILITIAS

Transcript
Australian Broadcasting Corp.
7:30 News with Kerry O'Brien
03/09/1999

Kerry O'Brien talks with an East Timorese activist who says he has details of 
secret meetings between the Indonesian military and pro-Jakarta militia to 
plan a new wave of violence. 

Indonesian military planning more East Timor violence, says activist

KERRY O'BRIEN: Indonesia's Defence Minister, General Wiranto, whose own 
credibility is on the line, has ordered another 1,400 troops into East Timor 
to restore order.

But independence activists say it's the military who've been sanctioning the 
violence.

Abel Guterres, from the East Timorese Relief Association, and Father John 
Herd, from the Catholic Overseas Aid Agency, have just returned from East 
Timor where Mr Guterres says he was given intelligence reports of meetings 
between the Indonesian military and pro-Indonesian militia leaders to 
organise a new wave of violence.

I spoke with both men in our Melbourne studio a short while ago.

KERRY O'BRIEN: Abel Guterres, you say that you're privy to information 
relating to at least two meetings this week involving the Indonesian 
military, the Indonesian police on East Timor and, in one of those meetings, 
the militia.

Now, what do you say you have learnt from those meetings?

ABEL GUTERRES, EAST TIMORESE RELIEF ASSOCIATION: The first meeting that took 
place on Tuesday was between the commanders of the Kopassus with the militia 
leaders, and that's when the military presented a broad plan of the rampage 
that's supposed to take place from now on.

The second one, which was today, following that major meeting, that big 
meeting, was that the military is going to allow the militias to carry on the 
killings and ensure that the police and the military watch from the 
background.

Now, one very important factor here is that they specifically gave orders 
that any militias who do not take out action will be shot, and I think this 
is very disturbing, and which is confirmed in the reports that we've received 
because some of the militias are very concerned and worried for their own 
safety and also of their own families because once the military go on a 
rampage behind them and then the military don't know who the families of the 
militias are, so they are very, very concerned as well as the rest of the 
civilian population.

KERRY O'BRIEN: So how do you know this information?

How have you been able to get access to what happened at those meetings?

ABEL GUTERRES: We have our own intelligence reports, our own network, around 
East Timor which are constantly giving us the update report of what's 
happening on the ground as well as the Indonesian communications system.

KERRY O'BRIEN: So is that just a blanket order?

Do you have any information in terms of dates, in terms of places?

ABEL GUTERRES: Well, in fact, the plan has already started because the exits 
and entrances to Dili from all sides are blockaded by the militia now, and 
also in Dili the strategic points are being manned by the militias to control 
the people's movement.

KERRY O'BRIEN: And it doesn't surprise you then, I suppose, that all UN 
personnel have been forced to leave Maliana as a result of militia activity 
there?

ABEL GUTERRES: That's correct.

I think, Kerry, I need to really emphasise here that the militia are not a 
different group or an isolated group.

They are part and parcel of the Indonesian military system.

Everything that the military does, that's when the militias will carry that 
out.

I really want to appeal to Australia and international community that 24 
years of killing is enough and this is the time where Australia can take an 
honourable role to bring peace to East Timor, which is get the peacekeeping 
force into East Timor to stop the carnage.

I think one important factor also is that Indonesia allow the militias to 
carry guns when our leader Xanana Gusmao was charged by possessing the 
weapons.

So here again clearly the Indonesian military is violating its own laws, and 
yet international community and Australian Government is still allowing this 
to take place.

KERRY O'BRIEN: Father Herd, do you have any solid corroboration of what Abel 
Guterres is alleging?

FATHER JOHN HERD, CARITAS AUSTRALIA: Well, Kerry, I'm just aware that the 
resistance military has been very disciplined in the whole time up until now.

They have refrained from taking any action against the military, against the 
militia or the military.

I'm aware that there is intelligence which is gathered through the resistance 
and it seems to be, from all accounts, to be accurate.

There are blockades, of course, on Dili and it seems as though the militia 
are taking control.

KERRY O'BRIEN: The vote result is to be announced tomorrow now.

What impact do you expect that to have if, as is anticipated, it will show a 
strong vote in favour of independence?

FATHER JOHN HERD: I think there's widespread fear throughout East Timor that 
that will be a time when there will be a lot of bloodshed.

KERRY O'BRIEN: Does it concern you that the extent to which international 
journalists are leaving?

FATHER JOHN HERD: I think it's appalling that international journalists are 
intimidated.

It's bad enough that the ordinary East Timorese people are intimidated, but 
to have international journalists fear for their own safety and they need to 
depart, I think it's absolutely appalling.

I fear even more for the East Timorese people if the journalists leave.

They're really the window, the communication to the outside world, the 
protection in so many ways for the East Timorese people.

KERRY O'BRIEN: Given that what seems to be the motivation behind this 
systematic pattern of brutality that's been taking place in recent months is 
to intimidate East Timorese, to what extent from your six weeks -- from the 
most recent six weeks that you've been there -- to what extent has that 
operation succeeded in intimidating ordinary East Timorese?

FATHER JOHN HERD: Of course, I think there was footage shown here in 
Australia of the voting day last Monday, when so many Timorese people turned 
out to vote.

98.6 per cent of those who registered turned out to vote and they did so with 
great courage and determination.

If that vote is overwhelmingly in favour of independence, I think that there 
is a strong call to the international community for assistance.

I think that it has shown that they refuse to be intimidated, but they do 
call for help.

KERRY O'BRIEN: Abel Guterres, General Wiranto announced in Jakarta this 
afternoon that he was sending in an extra 1,400 troops -- military troops, 
not police -- to assist to restore control in East Timor.

Does that hearten you at all?

ABEL GUTERRES: Well, Kerry, that is to add to the number of the military on 
the ground when the rampage takes place and they're there to do the job and 
they're not there to protect the East Timorese as such.

KERRY O'BRIEN: But you have such a strong contingent of UN personnel to 
observe the situation and still some foreign journalists.

Surely they wouldn't be that blatant?

ABEL GUTERRES: Well, Kerry, haven't they done that in the past few days?

I think they are prepared for real revenge on the East Timorese population 
for voting for their own right to a free and independent country.

KERRY O'BRIEN: You talk about "clean sweeps".

What do you mean by "clean sweep"?

ABEL GUTERRES: Clean sweeps means that they will go through all the major 
suburbs that are strongholds of the independence movement, which means that 
they'll go in through the villages and shoot in an uncontrolled manner with 
machine-guns and so forth.

KERRY O'BRIEN: Have you seen the reports that the Indonesian Government has 
prepared plans to evacuate as many as 250,000 East Timorese from the island 
if control cannot be restored?

ABEL GUTERRES: That's right, Kerry.

This is why the military are there and the military are part of these 
terrorising activities.

The only one thing that we need now in East Timor is the international 
peacekeeping force to stand between the Indonesian military and defending the 
East Timorese population, defenceless people.

KERRY O'BRIEN: Father Herd and Abel Guterres, thank you both very much for 
talking with us.

FATHER JOHN HERD: Thank you, Kerry.

ABEL GUTERRES: Thank you, Kerry.

KERRY O'BRIEN: And we have made several efforts to seek interviews with 
representatives of the Indonesian Government, including the office of the 
president, the foreign minister and the ambassador here in Australia.

We've been unsuccessful.

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excerpts from articles in SMH 9/03/98 & The Australian 19/03/98, 29/08/98: 

Indonesian Kopassus has been training with the SASR since 1992. For Canberra, 
the type of training undertaken by Indonesia's Army Special Forces in 
Australia has become a sensitive matter given the Indonesian army's primary 
responsibility for internal security and the reality of human rights abuses 
involving its members. Since 1992, about 30 Kopassus troops each year have 
travelled to Australia for exercise Night Kookaburra to develop counter 
hijack capabilities with the SASR at Swanbourne. About 80 SASR personnel 
travel to Indonesia each year for the Night Komodo series of exercises which 
involves jungle warfare training usually at Kopassus's Batujajar base near 
the West Java capital of Bandung where one of the five Kopasuss groups is 
stationed. Kopassus recently rescued Western hostages in the jungles of Irian 
Jaya in 1996 from nationalist Free Papuan Movement OPM guerillas. The rapidly 
expanding role of the SASR in training Indonesian Kopassus, risks associating 
Australia with human rights abuses warned Brigadier Jim Molan, defence 
attache to the Australian Embassy in Jakarta.

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