Tentara tidak pernah salah
Tentara tidak pernah kalah

On 7 October 2016 at 13:45, Marco 45665 [email protected] [GELORA45] <
[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> ...Mungkin sudah demikian SERBA SALAH - NYA.......
>
> On 7 October 2016 at 12:29, Yoseph T Taher [email protected]
> [GELORA45] <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>
>> *Heh......heh......Tentara  kan nggak pernah
>> salah.......heh.......heh........!*
>>
>>
>>
>> ------ Original Message ------
>> From: "'Sunny' [email protected] [GELORA45]" <[email protected]>
>> To:
>> Sent: Friday, 7 Oct, 2016 At 8:08 PM
>> Subject: [GELORA45] FM dismisses ‘pretty diplomat’ furor  +  Listening to
>> the Pacific beat on Papua
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> *RI telah menandatangani dan  meratifikasi berbagai konvensi
>> internasional, misalnya* :  “*Convention against Torture  and Other
>> Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment”,** sekalipun
>> demikian tidak berubah perlakuan TNI dan  Polri, teristimewa di Papua dan
>> Maluku**. Ini yang dikatakan oleh wakil Salomon di sidang  umum PBB
>> pada first reply :
>> http://webtv.un.org/search/solomon-islands-first-right-of-reply-/5141621665001?term=Iran,%20right%20of%20reply
>> <http://webtv.un.org/search/solomon-islands-first-right-of-reply-/5141621665001?term=Iran,%20right%20of%20reply>*
>>
>>
>> http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2016/10/01/fm-dismisses-p
>> retty-diplomat-furor.html
>>
>> FM dismisses ‘pretty  diplomat’ furor
>>
>>    -
>>
>>
>>    The Jakarta Post
>>
>> | Sat, October 1 2016 | 09:33 am
>> *Nara Masista Rakhmatia* -  Tribunnews.com
>>
>> The Foreign Ministry on Thursday brushed off  concerns that Indonesia had
>> insulted no fewer than six Pacific Island heads of  state, following a
>> viral video of a junior diplomat trashing their allegations  of human
>> rights violations in Papua and West Papua during the recent UN General
>>  Assembly (UNGA).
>>
>> Social media users this week have been agog over the  UNGA session where
>> Nara Masista Rakhmatia, the second secretary at Indonesia’s  permanent
>> mission to the UN, responded to last Saturday’s speeches of the heads  of
>> state of Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Nauru, Marshall Islands, Tuvalu and
>> Tonga.
>>
>> “Nara was speaking using the right of reply on Saturday [Sept. 24],
>>  which was after the heads of state had finished giving their statements.
>> She  didn’t speak during the session of the heads of state,” ministry
>> spokesman  Arrmanatha Nasir said.
>>
>> The 71st UNGA was held in New York from Sept. 19  to 29.
>>
>> Many viewers of the video of the “pretty young diplomat”, viewed  almost
>> 200,000 times on Youtube as of Friday afternoon, praised Nara’s response,
>>  saying it had “checkmated” or “crushed” the heads of state.
>>
>> Among other  things, the Indonesian diplomat said criticism against
>> Indonesia amounted to  “interference” and encouraged separatism in the two
>> provinces.
>>
>> However,  others questioned why the ministry had assigned a lower-ranking
>> diplomat to  respond to the heads of state, which could be interpreted as a
>> deliberate insult  to them and their countries.
>>
>> Furthermore, reports on Friday said Nara  was drawing fury from
>> “separatists”, who cited repeated and unresolved human  rights violations
>> against residents of Papua and West Papua.
>>
>> Evi  Fitriani, a lecturer of international law at the University of
>> Indonesia (UI),  said Indonesia had not violated any convention, “but
>> diplomatically there is  this rule of reciprocity, that if a head of state
>> says something, the response  shall come from another head of state” or at
>> least from a high-ranking  official.
>>
>> She added it was legally acceptable, “but not diplomatically
>>  appropriate” for Indonesia to have the second secretary deliver the
>> responding  statement.
>>
>> Arrmanatha said Nara’s response was “Indonesia’s position,  which has
>> been discussed thoroughly” within the ministry. “It doesn’t matter who
>>  says it. Whoever conveys the message, it is still Indonesia’s position,”
>> he  said.
>>
>> For the country’s diplomats, he added, “the unitary state of the
>>  Indonesian Republic is a fixed price” where interference in Indonesia’s
>>  sovereignty and separatism is unacceptable.
>>
>> Hikmahanto Juwana, another  international law expert, said it was normal
>> for Nara, as a diplomat in the  Indonesian delegation, to convey the reply.
>> “It was an Indonesian voice,” he  said on Friday.
>>
>> On Monday, Australia’s state broadcaster ABC quoted  Solomon Islands
>> Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare as saying at the UN General  Assembly,
>> “Human rights violations in West Papua and the pursuit for
>>  self-determination of West Papua [Papua] are two sides of the same coin.”
>>
>> “Many reports on human rights violations in West Papua emphasize the
>>  inherent corroboration between the right to self-determination that
>> results in  direct violation of human rights by Indonesia and its attempts
>> to smother any  form of opposition.”
>>
>> Nara said such criticism “only reaffirmed the  persistent violation of
>> […] the UN Charter by blatantly interfering in the  internal affairs of
>> other states, violating the sovereignty and territorial  integrity of other
>> nations.”
>>
>> The Indonesian government has previously  said it is examining 22 cases
>> of alleged human rights violations in Papua, three  of which it hopes to
>> complete by the end of this year.
>>
>> Critics say the  government persistently approaches issues relating to
>> Papua with policies that  rely heavily on doling out money while ignoring
>> human rights abuses.
>>
>> The  alleged failure of Papua’s special autonomy has given rise to
>> attempts to  support independence movements, particularly from Pacific
>> nations.  *(vny)*
>>
>> *++++*
>>
>> http://www.thejakartapost.com/academia/2016/09/29/listening-
>> to-the-pacific-beat-on-papua.html
>> Listening to the  Pacific beat on Papua
>>
>>    -
>>    Budi Hernawan
>>
>> Jakarta |  Thu, September 29 2016 | 08:07 am
>> [image: Listening to the Pacific beat on Papua]
>> Defiance: A Papuan activist shouts slogans during a demonstration  to
>> commemorate the West Papuan declaration of independence from Dutch rule in
>>  Jakarta on Dec. 1, 2015. The Police fired tear gas to disperse more than
>> 100  Papuan protesters during the rally.(JP/DMR)
>>
>> In an unprecedented move, seven UN member states  from the Pacific raised
>> their concerted voices on Papua during the prestigious  71st session of the
>> UN General Assembly in New York this week.
>>
>> Nauru started the intervention by highlighting  the issue of human rights
>> violations in Papua, followed by a newcomer in the  discourse of Papua: the
>> Marshall Islands.
>>
>> Vanuatu, Tuvalu and the Solomon Islands followed  suit and went one step
>> further by specifically highlighting the issue of the  right to
>> self-determination for Papuans. Tonga emphasised the gravity of the
>>  problem and Palau, another novice, called for constructive dialogue with
>>  Indonesia to solve the Papua issue.
>>
>> This was a historic moment for us as we have  never had such unified
>> high-profile intervention when it comes to the issue of  Papua at the UN.
>> Perhaps the only lone ranger used to be Vanuatu, which tried to  break the
>> silence of the UN fora.
>>
>> This week’s debate at the UN General Assembly  might remind us of a
>> similar but much more colorful debate on Papua at the  assembly in 1969,
>> when the forum decided to close the chapter on Papua by  accepting the
>> result of the Act of Free Choice.
>>
>> If in 1969 some African countries expressed  opposition to the assembly’s
>> decision to adopt the result of the 1969 Act of  Free Choice for Papuans,
>> today the Pacific nations are taking the  lead.
>>
>> Indonesia’s response, however, was highly  predictable. Repeating the
>> slogan of territorial integrity and sovereignty, the  government’s response
>> unfortunately does not provide us with facts and evidence  of the
>> improvement in the human rights situation in Papua.
>>
>> It may be remembered that President Joko  “Jokowi” Widodo promised to
>> solve the killing of four high-school students in  Paniai on Dec. 8, 2014.
>> The investigation into the case has been delayed for  almost two years and
>> we have not seen much progress.
>>
>> The families of the victims recall that at least  eight government
>> institutions sent their respective fact-finding team to  interview victims
>> on the ground and personnel of the Army, the Papua Police, the  National
>> Police, the Air Force, the Papua Legislative Council, the Witness and
>>  Victim Protection Agency (LPSK), the Office of Coordinating Security,
>> Political  and Legal Affairs Minister, the National Commission on Human
>> Rights (Komnas  HAM). None of these teams, however, has ever published
>> their report for public  consumption.
>>
>> Similarly, the dossiers on the Wasior killings  of 2001 and the Wamena
>> case of 2003 have been pending for more than a decade at  the Attorney
>> General once Komnas HAM finished its investigation. These were not
>>  ordinary crimes but crimes against humanity, one of the most serious
>> crimes  punishable by Indonesian and international law. Unfortunately, both
>> Komnas HAM  and the Attorney General’s Office have argued over evidence and
>> procedure for  years.
>>
>> Komnas HAM insists that it has provided  conclusive evidence and has
>> followed proper procedure. On the other hand, the  Attorney General’s
>> Office has argued that Komnas HAM has not met the requirement  of a
>> pro-justice investigation as investigators did not take an oath as required
>>  by the Criminal Law Procedures Code. Both institutions have overlooked the
>> fact  that victims continue to suffer.
>>
>> Memories are still fresh on the surge in the  arrests of Papuan youth
>> when they took to the streets to express their opinions  in public despite
>> a constitutional guarantee of the right to do so.
>>
>> The Jakarta Legal Aid Institute (LBH Jakarta)  documented that at least
>> 4,587 individuals, men and women, were arrested by the  police for
>> expressing their political views in 13 cities, namely Dekai, Fakfak,
>>  Jakarta, Jayapura, Kaimana, Makassar, Malang, Manado Manokwari, Merauke,
>>  Sentani, Wamena and Yogyakarta.
>>
>> While most of the arrestees were released within  24 hours, the
>> deployment of police in 13 jurisdictions across the country would  not have
>> been possible without the blessing of the National Police top  brass.
>>
>> While we were grappling with human rights  conditions in Papua, we were
>> shocked by the President’s decision to appoint Gen.  (ret) Wiranto as the
>> coordinating political, legal and security affairs  minister.
>>
>> In February 2003, the UN-sponsored Special  Panels for Serious Crimes of
>> the Dili District Court, Timor Leste, indicted Gen.  Wiranto, then the
>> Indonesian defense and security minister and Indonesian Armed  Forces
>> (ABRI) commander for crimes against humanity in connection with the  events
>> in Timor Leste in 1999.
>>
>> As we were yet to recover from the President’s  unfathomable choice, we
>> were presented with another unprecedented decision when  the Indonesian
>> Military TNI chief named Maj. Gen. Hartomo to lead the military’s
>>  Strategic Intelligence Agency (BAIS).
>>
>> Hartomo was the commander of the Army’s Special  Forces (Kopassus)
>> Tribuana X unit assigned to Papua when Theys Eluay was  murdered. Hartomo
>> and six other Kopassus officers were charged with Theys’  murder on
>> National Heroes Day in 2001. He and his team were found guilty and
>>  sentenced to three years in prison by the Surabaya Military Court and
>> discharged  from the Army.
>>
>> These all are simple facts that tell us the way  our government commits
>> to human rights in Papua and elsewhere, which the  Indonesian delegation to
>> the UN General Assembly describes as “robust and  active”.
>> ______________________________
>>
>> *The writer, who obtained his PhD from the  Australian National
>> University, lectures in international relations at the  Paramadina Graduate
>> School of Diplomacy,  Jakarta.*
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
> 
>

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