http://www.thejakartapost.com/yesterdaydetail.asp?fileid=20060923.E03


Why should they fear the (angry) masses? 
Opinion and Editorial - September 23, 2006 


George J. Aditjondro, Jakarta



"This is the largest deployment of troops in the history of Central Sulawesi." 
So a police commander in Palu told me, in the wake of the execution of Fabianus 
Tibo, Marinus Riwu, and Dominggus da Silva last night. Nearly 5,000 police 
personnel have been stationed in Palu, the capital of the province, in the 
troublesome district of Poso, and neighboring Morowali, where the three farmers 
from Flores, East Nusa Tenggara, had migrated to work at the oil palm estates, 
to find a better life.

Fearful that their executions would trigger mass protests, the authorities did 
not want to release their bodies to their families to be buried with proper 
Catholic rituals. A requiem mass, which Bishop of Manado Yosephus Suwatan was 
going to celebrate, was prohibited by the authorities. 

According to plans, by daybreak, a Skytrack plane chartered by the police flew 
the remains of Tibo and Riwu to Beteleme, their home subdistrict since arriving 
as transmigrants in Central Sulawesi, to be buried in the home villages of 
their respective wives, native Mori women. 

Meanwhile, the parents of da Silva, who have been waiting and grieving for 
their son for the last five weeks (the executions were originally set for Aug. 
12), are now in further agony. Fearful of the reaction of the angry masses in 
Flores, the authorities have rejected da Silva's last request to be buried in 
Flores, burying him instead in an unknown place in or around Palu. 

Rejecting a dying man's last wishes, even if he has been labeled a criminal by 
society or the state, is quite unacceptable in Indonesian society. What is even 
more unacceptable is to prohibit last rites for Indonesian citizens, including 
those who have been on death row. 

So why are the Indonesian authorities so fearful of the people, the masses, 
that all these security precautions have been taken to bury the bodies of these 
three Flores farmers, allowing only the minimum presence of their relatives? 
And, in the case of da Silva, without any of his relatives from Flores? 

The big question then is, why fear the masses? Even the angry masses, if the 
authorities have not done any wrong to the three simple migrant farmers from 
Flores? The fact it that from the very time of their detention and trial, the 
fate of the trio had already been sealed as scapegoats for the social unrest in 
the Poso region in Central Sulawesi. 

Although a double minority, both ethnic and religious, in Poso, they have been 
accused of masterminding a communal conflict, and especially a so-called attack 
on a Muslim religious school, nine kilometers south of the town of Poso. Yes, 
they had been sentenced to death by a court in Palu in April 2001, where the 
judges had to pass their sentence under the threatening eyes of thousands of 
refugees, hungry for revenge: eye for an eye, three lives for the hundreds 
lost. 

Further research by myself and colleagues at the Tanah Merdeka Foundation has 
cast serious doubts on the fairness and truth of the accusations against the 
Flores trio. Even the previous police commander of Central Sulawesi, (Pol) 
Brig. Gen. Oegroseno doubted the decision of the Palu lower court, which was 
endorsed by the Central Sulawesi high court and Supreme Court. 

Thus, he tacitly rebelled against Jakarta's decision to execute the trio, by 
being absent from the provincial capital on Aug. 12, 2006. A daring stance to 
take, which cost him his position since soon after that he was demoted to a 
position at police headquarters in Jakarta. 

The ordinary people in Central Sulawesi and in the trio's home province, 
however, cannot grasp the logic of capital punishment for Tibo, Riwu, and da 
Silva. How could these three simple farmers, whose presence in the town of Poso 
was simply to protect their children in the Catholic school in Poso from 
attacks by angry riots, could at the same time be the masterminds and executors 
of the "attack" on the Walisongo pesantren at Km 9? 

Yes, I emphasize the word "attack", since during the initial years of the Poso 
unrest from late 1998 till late 2000 (with a year of calm in 1999), two 
religious communities were attacking each other. So, how could three persons 
from one community, who were not even from the dominant ethnic group and 
denomination, be single-handedly "chosen" to be the masterminds of the riots at 
that time? 

This is why many people in the Poso and Morowali districts in Central Sulawesi, 
and many more people in Flores and West Timor in East Nusa Tenggara, cannot 
accept the executions of the three farmers. As far as the educated elite in 
Central Sulawesi, East Nusa Tenggara and in Java are concerned, there is a 
bigger problem at stake. 

The executions of Tibo and his two colleagues is seen simply as an attempt by 
the regime of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Jusuf Kalla to cover up the real 
persons and institutions who should be held accountable for the ongoing unrest 
in Central Sulawesi, where violence from Poso spread to Morowali and even to 
the provincial capital, Palu. So, while Tibo and his colleagues were sitting in 
Palu prison for more than five years, violence had been continuing in the 
province, escalating in scale and method. 

History will judge SBY and Kalla for neglecting their sworn duty to protect the 
safety and well-being of the people of the Poso region, who included Tibo, 
Riwu, and da Silva. They know this and that is why they fear the angry masses 
in Poso and Flores and hide behind the thousands of police persons and hundreds 
of military men, where ebony thieves are the only main local villains. 

The writer is a research and publication consultant to Yayasan Tanah Merdeka in 
Palu. He has conducted research on the background of the unrest in Poso for the 
last four years


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