http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/opinion/analysis-killing-indonesians-isnt-keeping-country-free/551402

Analysis: Killing Indonesians Isn’t Keeping Country Free
Pitan Daslani | October 21, 2012

 Throughout history, Indonesian police and military have killed more 
Indonesians than foreign enemies of the nation. (AFP Photo/Tjahjo Eranius) 

The Indonesian government and its people have struggled for more than six 
decades to establish a peaceful and harmonious state, but during the process 
have seen lots of unnecessary deaths involving their own citizens. 

Striving to promote national cohesion, ideological unity and territorial 
integrity, the armed forces, comprising of police and the military, have 
ironically directed their weapons more frequently against their own people than 
outside enemies. 

A brief glance at Indonesia’s history reveals that in the name of protecting 
national unity, citizens with different ideological beliefs and values were 
killed in order to prevent them from becoming bigger threats to the nation. 

Three years after its independence, the nation began to see the beginning of 
what would be a covert danger to its survival. From September to December in 
1948, the Indonesian Armed Forces fought the communist “Soviet Republic of 
Indonesia” as it was proclaimed on Sept. 18 by Muso and Alimin in Madiun, East 
Java. 

This movement was strangely supported by then Minister of Defense Amir 
Sjarifoeddin. It was the embryo of a bigger threat that manifested itself in 
September 1965 when the Communist Party of Indonesia launched a coup that 
killed six military generals. 

The government’s response was to kill those categorized as “rebels and 
subversives.” History reveals that from Sept. 18, 1948, until Sept. 30, 1965, 
during the communist uprising and the years that followed, millions of 
Indonesian citizens perished — at the hands of the state. 

Indonesians became the biggest enemy to their own government. 

We as a nation killed millions of our own people because they didn’t think the 
way we did. Ideological threats were rightly or wrongly the justification for 
taking the lives of our fellow citizens. 

I imagined how the government would stockpile weapons to conduct a 
state-sponsored breach of human rights — if placed in present-day context. 

Following the Madiun uprising, on Aug. 7, 1949, Sekarmadji Maridjan 
Kartosoewirjo proclaimed the “Theocratic Islamic State of Indonesia” to be 
based in Cisampah village, in the Ciawiligar sub-district of Tasikmalaya, West 
Java. 

The Koran and Hadith were to be legalized as part of the country’s new 
constitution. This movement spread to West Java, Central Java, South Sulawesi 
and Aceh. 

Again the military responded by killing its own people to preserve national 
identity and unity. 

Though Kartosoewirjo had been executed in 1962, his radical teachings prevailed 
over decades, even to date, but in various manifestations that cannot easily be 
identified. 

Most of Indonesia’s terrorists have based their struggles on the radical 
theocratic doctrines Kartosoewirjo left behind. They are ready to die as 
terrorists believing that is the only way to reach heaven. 

But instead of bringing them back to the right advocation of religious 
teachings, or applying measures to prevent the spread of religious radicalism, 
the government went back to repressive therapy. 

The result was the growing list of “unwanted citizens.” 

In March 1957, Col. Ventje Sumual’s Permesta movement, in North Sulawesi and 
West Sumatra, attracted world attention. The name of this movement was an 
Indonesian acronym for what was then called the Universal Struggle Charter. 

Indonesia’s military attache in Washington resigned and joined Sumual as his 
general to fight the central government until they surrendered and were given 
amnesty in 1961. 

Reports said that CIA support of the rebels came in the form of 15 B-26 bombers 
that formed the insurgent air force called AUREV (Angkatan Udara Revolusioner) 
based on a Manado airfield. 

The CIA also reportedly provided a large amount of weapons, equipment, funds, 
spies and mercenaries from Taiwan, Poland, the Philippines and the United 
States. This emboldened the rebels to attack the central government. 

The cities bombed by CIA-directed planes included Balikpapan, Makassar and 
Ambon in May 1958, killing large numbers of civilians attending Ascension Day 
Sunday services. Responding to this, President Sukarno ordered the military to 
crush the rebellion. 

Jakarta’s lack of attention to the outer region’s welfare was part of the 
reason for the struggle. Negative social and ethnic sentiment, in addition to 
injustice in the then Republic of the United States of Indonesia, added fuel to 
the fire. 

In recent years, a revival of radical religious doctrines is believed to have 
become the primary reason for the fast spread of terrorism inside the country. 
Coupled with foreign influences like Al Qaeda, Indonesian extremists found 
justification for continuing their fights. 

Military response to subversive movements is justified by law because the 
military exists to protect the nation-state. 

But in the present-day context, in which preservation of human rights is highly 
regarded by civilized nations, we need to revisit the way we define our 
“justified response” to our fellow citizens’ actions and beliefs that we 
consider subversive. 

Indonesian terrorists do not believe that they have done anything wrong — 
though the rest of us do. Because of that, they are ready die for what they 
believe in. We call them subversives; they call themselves heroes. 

If we could be honest with ourselves, we could conclude that we are facing 
forces of ignorance, and not stupidity. Such ignorance is a state of mind based 
on a system that rejects anything other than ideas to cement and expand the 
ignorance further. 

So, applying legal measures to ignorance is actually the wrong approach to 
ending radicalism. What the state must do is not kill its citizens who think 
radically but teach them to stop those thoughts. 

Very few prevention efforts have taken place since the Madiun uprising, as the 
government still kills citizens it calls enemies. 

The bullets of the police and military have killed more Indonesian citizens 
than foreign enemies. Similarly stupid are the actions of Indonesian terrorists 
whose explosives have killed too many wrong targets. 

So, as Densus 88 continues to hunt down terrorists, we must remind ourselves 
that the anti-terror squad cannot kill the ideology that lives in the minds of 
millions. 

Preventive efforts through education are better than relying on violence to fix 
ideological threats that are out of reach of our weapons. 

The government needs to find a better way of coping with ideological threats. 
Few people would agree that repressive therapy is the right way to stop 
radicalism once and for all.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke