http://thejakartaglobe.com/home/balibo-ban-wins-rave-reviews-from-indonesian-military/345194

December 02, 2009 
Markus Junianto Sihaloho & Putri Prameshwari

 
>From left, Mark Leonard Winter, Thomas Wright and Gyton Grantley as Tony 
>Stewart, Brian Peters and Gary Cunningham, portraying three of the Balibo Five 
>in new film. (Photo courtesy of Balibo Films Pty.)



'Balibo' Ban Wins Rave Reviews From Indonesian Military

The banning of Australian film "Balibo" showed that there was no real democracy 
in Indonesia, film activists said on Wednesday, although government and 
military officials welcomed the ban. 

Film director Riri Riza said that even though it was predictable, the ban 
showed that censorship was still rife in the nation despite its claims to 
democracy. 

"We have never moved away from [Suharto's] New Order era," he said. "At least 
in the context of film censorship." 

Riri said that unless something was done, the National Film Censorship Board 
(LSF) would continue restricting films considered too controversial or 
critical. 

The film tells the story of five journalists who were killed when the tiny 
border town of Balibo in East Timor was taken over by Indonesian forces in 
October 1975. A sixth journalist died weeks later when Dili was invaded by 
Indonesian forces. 

The so-called Balibo Five, according to official Indonesian and Australian 
government accounts, died in the crossfire as Indonesian troops fought East 
Timorese Fretilin rebels. 

Abduh Azis, chairman of the Indonesian Film Society, said the ban made it even 
clearer how the country was now facing a crisis in freedom of expression. "This 
is a serious problem," he said. 

Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said the restriction was to protect the 
country's image abroad. 

"What we have to be cautious of, is not to let this film affect the global 
perception of Indonesia. If it [the ban] is explained well, then I think there 
will be no problem," Marty told Agence France-Presse. 

Balibo's director, Robert Connolly, told the Australian Broadcasting 
Corporation that he was disappointed by the censorship. "I had high hopes for 
the film and the impact it may have had if it had been screened in Indonesia." 

The Indonesian Armed Forces said was fully behind the ban. Military spokesman 
Air Vice Marshall Sagom Tamboen said the movie would only reopen old wounds. It 
would harm the good relationship between Indonesia and East Timor, as well as 
between Indonesia and Australia, he said. 

"It is a correct decision for the LSF to ban the movie," Sagom said. "If the 
movie had been played, then it means that we justify their accusation that the 
military did shoot the journalists to death. For us, the Balibo case is over. 
The journalists were killed accidentally in crossfire between Indonesian troops 
and Fretilin. They were not shot by Indonesian troops," he said. 

The families of the dead newsmen have long insisted official accounts were a 
lie and they have kept up a steady campaign for decades to bring justice to 
their loved ones. 

An Australian coroner's inquest in 2007 found that the five were killed 
deliberately by Indonesian forces, a finding that eventually prompted 
Australian Police to launch an official investigation into the incident two 
months ago. 

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has said the investigation was a step 
backward and could harm relations between the two nations.




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