http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/GG13Ae04.html



Setback to US's Indonesian ties
By Jim Lobe 

WASHINGTON - A recent appeals court decision in Indonesia to acquit 12 soldiers 
convicted last year of a 1984 massacre in Jakarta could complicate efforts by 
the administration of US President George W Bush to normalize military ties 
with the country. 

The acquittal, which was reported by the BBC but has yet to be officially 
confirmed, follows a series of court decisions that have freed military 
officers from responsibility for major abuses of human rights, particularly the 
1999 rampage by military-backed militias in East Timor. 

It also follows approval by the US House of Representatives of an 
administration request to lift all restrictions on military aid for Indonesia 
in next year's pending foreign aid bill. 

The Senate, however, is expected to approve its own version later this summer, 
according to one aide, who warned that the reported acquittal would make it 
more likely that the upper chamber would maintain existing curbs. 

"This kind of action suggests that it would be premature to drop existing 
restrictions," said the aide, noting that a recent finding by a commission 
appointed by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono that agents of the military-run 
State Intelligence Agency were behind the murder-by-poison of a prominent 
human-rights activist would also bolster lawmakers who opposed rapid 
normalization of military ties. 

Human Rights Watch also strongly denounced the reported court acquittals in the 
case of the so-called Tanjung Priok massacre, which took place in September 
1984 when security forces fired on Muslim protestors during anti-government 
demonstrations in north Jakarta, killing 33 people. The demonstration was held 
to denounce the arrests of several key Muslim leaders. 

"Whether it is a massacre from the Suharto era or killings in East Timor, these 
verdicts show that the Indonesian military continues to get away with murder," 
said Human Rights Watch. 

The Tanjung Priok case was one of two tried in 2001 under then-president 
Abdurrahman Wahid, based on a law passed by the Indonesian parliament the year 
before that established special human-rights courts. 

The other was aimed at investigating and prosecuting those responsible for the 
1999 rampage in Timor in which hundreds of people were killed and most of the 
territory's infrastructure was destroyed. Sixteen military officers and two 
civilians were put on trial. Last year, an appeals court overturned the 
convictions of all of the military officers, including Major General Adam 
Damiri, the highest-ranking military officer to be convicted of crimes against 
humanity. 

The only convictions that were sustained were of ethnic Timorese civilians, 
including a militia leader, whose sentence was reduced from 10 to five years in 
prison, and the former governor of the province, Abilio Jose Soares, who is 
currently serving a three-year term. 

This appeals court decision elicited protests from the Bush administration 
which, however, has made little secret of its desire to normalize military ties 
that were initially restricted following the massacre of over 200 civilian 
demonstrators in Dili, East Timor, in 1991 and then virtually severed 
altogether after the 1999 rampage. 

As the world's most populous Muslim nation, and one where Islamic extremists 
have made some inroads, the Pentagon, in particular, believes that Jakarta has 
a key role to play in its "war on terror". 

Since 2001, the Pentagon and the administration have waged a relentless and 
largely successful effort to ease restrictions on US military ties with Jakarta 
and open up new channels of military aid, mostly through the provision of 
"anti-terrorism" assistance and military exercises. 

Under administration pressure, Congress gradually dropped a series of 
conditions on the resumption of military assistance after 2001, including 
accountability for the East Timor rampage and subordination of the military to 
civilian authority. 

By late last year, only one condition on renewing military aid and non-lethal 
military sales to Indonesia remained - that the secretary of state certify that 
both the armed forces were cooperating fully with a Federal Bureau of 
Investigation (FBI) investigation of the August 2002 killings of two US 
schoolteachers and an Indonesian colleague in an ambush in Papua province. 

In late February, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice certified accordingly, 
despite the fact that the individual named by the FBI as a perpetrator of the 
killings had well-known links to the local armed forces commanders and was 
probably acting at their behest. 

Indeed, the suspect, Anthonius Wamang, remains at large in Papua and has yet to 
be indicted, let alone arrested, fueling suspicions that he has received 
military protection. The certification paved the way for the renewal of 
Indonesia's eligibility for the International Military Education and Training 
program, a giant step towards the Indonesian military's full rehabilitation. 

This was followed late last month by the House, acting at the behest of the 
Pentagon and its Republican leadership, agreeing to lift all restrictions on 
military aid for Indonesia, beginning at the start of fiscal year 2006 on 
October 1. 

Now this could be in jeopardy. 

(Inter Press Service)

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



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