Green Left Weekly 341, Nov 18, 1998, p3

Indonesians demand: Army out!

By Max Lane

At least 15 dead -- including five university students and one high
school activist -- and more than 300 seriously injured: that was the
cost of the stage-managed meeting of the Indonesian regime's People's
Consultative Assembly (MPR), which pushed through decrees confirming the
doctrine of the �dual function� of the armed forces. The meeting ended
on November 13.

Ida Nuraini, a member of the radical People's Democratic Party's (PRD)
central leadership council, was shot in the head with a rubber-coated
bullet and is in a serious condition in a Jakarta hospital.

There are unconfirmed reports that two activists from the Megawati
Supporters' Committee (KPM) were also killed. Other PRD student
activists are also unaccounted for (see accompanying appeal).

The deaths and injuries were caused by troops under the orders of armed
forces chief General Wiranto shooting into the crowds of peaceful
protesters.

The establishment daily newspaper Kompas described the soldiers'
shooting as membabi buta -- �like that of a blind pig�. PRD activists
contacted by Green Left Weekly agreed.

MPR

The MPR failed to alter the role of the military in the political system
established by the dictator Suharto after the 1965 bloodbath. The
1000-member body, comprising mostly people appointed or approved by
Suharto (with a few appointed by Suharto's successor, B.J. Habibie),
approved the domination of the armed forces over the political system.

Fifty-five military officers will be appointed to the Indonesian
parliament. The military structure, which reaches into every village,
remained untouched.

The timetable for elections and a new sitting for the MPR remains
intact, guaranteeing Habibie the presidency until at least December
1999. The elections will be organised and implemented by the
Habibie-Wiranto regime.

An appeal from the moderate opposition leaders, Megawati Sukarnoputri,
Amien Rais and Abdurrahman Wahid, for an independent election committee
was ignored.

This body of Suharto-Habibie appointees was able to conclude its phoney
deliberations only because of the presence of 30,000 troops mobilised to
prevent the parliament building from being occupied by more than 500,000
students, urban poor and workers.

Without the thousands of troops ringing the building, with their tear
gas, water cannons, tanks and armoured personnel carriers, the MPR would
have been aborted and, quite possibly, the Habibie-Wiranto regime would
have fallen.

The Habibie-Wiranto regime now rests only on the support of the military
and its willingness to use violence against the people. The regime
stands condemned and isolated. More confrontations will follow.

Students united

More than 150,000 students mobilised on November 12 and 13. These
mobilisations also drew hundreds of thousands of workers and urban poor.
Indonesian state radio reported that 1 million people mobilised on
November 12. A similar number mobilised on November 13.

The massive mobilisations resulted from a new level of unity achieved by
the student movement in Jakarta.

At the end of October, a new alliance called AKRAB was formed. AKRAB
brought together all the major student activist groups, and the
organised worker, urban poor and activist groups that support the demand
for a complete abolition of the military's role in politics and which
reject the legitimacy of the MPR.

AKRAB organised a demonstration of about 20,000 people in the first week
of November. The success of this mobilisation strengthened the
cooperation between these groups and ensured that the protests during
the MPR session would be well planned and coordinated.

Assembly points were selected in the eastern, western, southern and
northern parts of Jakarta and march routes into the city centre to the
parliamentary buildings chosen. There was agreement on the major
demands, such as an end to any role for the military in politics,
rejection of the MPR and the formation of a transitional government to
organise free elections.

There was a consensus that the students should call on the other
sections the Jakarta population to join the mobilisations.

This healed the divisions that had previously existed between those who
supported a student alliance with the non-student masses and those
opposed it. In the May mobilisations, a majority of the FORKOT
mobilising committee had voted against involving non-students.

Students moved through workers' neighbourhoods and encouraged people to
join the demonstrations. Residents along the routes offered drinks, food
and money donations.

Workers, poor join in

In the east of the city, students from the universities in the area, the
PRD, KOBAR, KOMRAD, KPM and FAMRED (see box for details of these groups)
mobilised their forces. By the late afternoon of November 12, activists
estimate that between 500,000 and 1 million people were moving along the
streets.

Large numbers also joined in the eastern mobilisations, under the
coordination of FORKOT.

Marshals were assigned along the route to protect shops owned by
Indonesian-Chinese, as well as banks. One lane was kept open so traffic
could pass. During the huge mobilisations, there was almost no damage to
property, driving home the lesson that, with a clear political direction
given to mass mobilisations, riots can be avoided.

On November 11, apparently without agreement from the police, the army
sent several thousand paid thugs, armed with sharpened bamboo sticks, to
help defend the parliament.

The students fought back. The Jakarta urban poor poured out of their
neighbourhoods, some armed with air rifles and other weapons, to defend
the students. The gangs of thugs quickly retreated and were ordered back
to their villages.

The use of thugs was widely criticised. General Wiranto defended the
deployment: �Why should anybody criticise people who just want to make
things safe?�. The police distanced themselves from the gangs.

Rumours spread that the paramilitary groups of the rightist Muslim group
FIRKAN, associated with the Star and Crescent Party, were to be
mobilised against the students. According to PRD activists, this was
stymied when the paramilitary group of the more moderate Nahdatul Ulama
(NU), headed by oppositionist Abdurrahman Wahid, threatened to side with
the students.

NU youth activists, influenced by a Muslim liberation theology, were
also active in the student mobilisations, especially in FAMRED.

Pitched battle

On the evening of November 12, between 7.30 and 10pm, a pitched battle
took place between about 15,000 demonstrators and the troops defending
the parliament building.

The demonstrators had broken through blockades on the eastern and
western approaches and made it to the gates of the MPR grounds. Charge
and counter-charge took place between the students and soldiers. Scores
of students were injured.

The worst military violence took place in the late afternoon and evening
of November 13. Soldiers indiscriminately fired rubber-coated bullets
into the crowds. Workers and urban poor had mobilised significantly and
they accounted for many of the hundreds who were injured.

The masses and students fought back with rocks, projectiles and molotov
cocktails.

Protests also occurred in other cities. In Solo, students occupied the
local parliament. In Yogyakarta, the state radio station was occupied.
Demonstrations also occurred in north Sumatra.

The solidarity between students, workers and the urban poor, combined
with increased organisation and militancy, represents a real threat to
the regime.

Attempts to stifle militancy

The most moderate of the student groups, FKMSJ, on November 10 and 11
virtually kidnapped moderate opposition leaders Megawati Sukarnoputri
and Amien Rais so that they could meet with the NU's Abdurrahman Wahid
and the �liberal� ruling party figure, Sultan Hamengkubuwono.

The FKMSJ students hoped these four leaders would demand that government
power be transferred to a presidium of these leaders. Instead, they
issued a mealy-mouthed statement that essentially recognised the MPR
session, called on it to make sure that elections, organised by an
independent body, were carried out in May and that a new government was
formed within three months of the election.

The leaders called for the military's role in politics to be phased out
over six years.

Disappointed by the statement, many FKMSJ students deserted the meeting
and joined the street demonstrations on November 13.

On November 13, Amien Rais explicitly appealed to the students to halt
the mobilisations on the grounds that �chaos� would give the military an
excuse to seize power.

Faisal Reza, the newly elected chairperson of the central leadership
council of the PRD, held a press conference on November 13 to reject the
statement issued by Megawati, Amien Rais, Abdurrahman Wahid and Sultan
Hamengkubuwono.

�The statement gives us nothing and is out of step with the people's
demands�, Reza said.

�Their statement legitimises the MPR, which is made up of Suharto
appointees. The MPR has not ended the military's role in politics. The
decree on corruption only mentions Suharto in passing. There was no firm
decision to hold Suharto to account for the crimes and massacres in East
Timor, Aceh, Tanjung Priok, Lampung and other areas.�

Faisal Reza reiterated that the PRD would continue to organise
extra-parliamentary mass action.

[Max Lane is national coordinator of Action in Solidarity with Indonesia
and East Timor. He recently returned from a visit to Indonesia.]









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