[nasional_list] [ppiindia] TNI uses Bali bombing to reassert political role

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Thu, 3 Nov 2005 21:54:11 +0100

** Forum Nasional Indonesia PPI India Mailing List **
** Untuk bergabung dg Milis Nasional kunjungi: 
** Situs Milis: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ppiindia/ **
** Beasiswa dalam negeri dan luar negeri S1 S2 S3 dan post-doctoral 
scholarship, kunjungi 
http://informasi-beasiswa.blogspot.com 
**http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2005/646/646p19.htm


INDONESIA: TNI uses Bali bombing to reassert political role

James Balowski, Jakarta 

Attending a ceremony to mark the 60th anniversary of the Indonesian military 
(TNI) on October 5, just days after the deadly bombing in Bali, President 
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono instructed the TNI to "take part in effectively 
curbing, preventing and acting against terrorism". 

Despite the fact that defence and intelligence analysts have repeatedly blamed 
poor coordination between intelligence units and unpopular government policies 
for the string of terrorist attacks over the last three years, the TNI 
immediately seized on the statement to justify reactivating its regional 
territorial command network. This was led by Yudhoyono himself when he was an 
active three-star general, and under the Suharto dictatorship it allowed the 
TNI to play a political role at all levels of society, leading to rampant human 
rights abuses. 

Speaking on the sidelines of the ceremony, TNI chief General Endriartono 
Sutarto said: "The government has given us [the TNI] a clear order to 
participate in the war against terrorism. First, we will raise the public 
awareness about the condition of people's neighbourhoods. Second, we will also 
activate the territorial command up to the village level, and third, of course, 
we will share intelligence information with other institutions, especially the 
police." 

Sensitive to public concerns over the move, defence minister Juwono Sudarsono 
told the public that the TNI would have no powers of arrest. This was later 
contradicted by Ansja'ad Mbai from the office of the Coordinating Minister for 
Political, Legal and Security Affairs, who told the Jakarta Post that the TNI 
could arrest suspected terrorists before handing them over to the police. "If 
we want the whole country to be protected from any kind of terror threats, then 
we must empower all elements of this nation to take part in the war on terror. 
Even regional military commanders should be authorised to arrest terror 
suspects", he said following an October 11 meeting on security affairs. 

Babinsa
Assigned down to the village level, non-commissioned officers called Babinsa 
were once the vanguard of the TNI's territorial command, or Koter, living in 
local communities and monitoring and reporting "suspicious" residents to the 
intelligence authorities. 

This began to be curtailed followings Suharto's overthrow in 1998. After the 
TNI was separated from the police in 2003, many of the roles of military 
intelligence and community policing were given to police, while the Babinsa's 
duties were confined to collecting strategic intelligence data. 

The military has constantly resisted calls for Koter to be dismantled. As well 
as entrenching the TNI's political power, Koter also provides huge business 
opportunities - protection rackets, gambling, prostitution, monopolies on 
commodity distribution and bribes from business. 

TNI's political role
Yet critics, including top politicians and rights groups, say reactivating 
Koter could pave the way for the TNI to reassert its repressive role. According 
to People's Consultative Assembly speaker Hidayat Nurwahid, the move is 
inappropriate and the function of the police and National Intelligence Agency 
(BIN) should be maximised first. He added that he feared it would create 
conflict between military and police officers in the field. 

Ikrar Nusabhakti, a researcher at the National Institute of Science, said it 
could pave the way for the TNI to reenter politics or legitimise rights abuses. 
"During the New Order [Suharto] regime, the military - read: the Army - 
maintained these (territorial) roles mostly for political purposes, and their 
mindset is yet to change as of today", Nusabhakti told the October 6 Jakarta 
Post. 

In a press release issued on October 11, the Indonesian Legal Aid Foundation 
(YLBHI) said that under the New Order, "the presence of the TNI from the 
national level (TNI headquarters), Kodam, Korem, Kodim, Koramil and even 
Babinsa became a tool to control and limit political space. It is this social 
and political function of Koter that is of concern, that it will return 
Indonesia to the era of authoritarianism under the New Order." YLBHI noted that 
Jakarta military commander Major General Agustadi Sasongko Purnomo has already 
announced that 1680 Babinsa will be reactivated throughout the city. 

In a joint statement issued on October 13, the Commission for Missing Persons 
and Victims of Violence (Kontras), the Institute for Policy Research and 
Advocacy, YLBHI and the Human Rights Working Group warned it would be a "blow 
to people's freedom". Describing the plan as a "major blow to democracy", Usman 
Hamid from Kontras said at a joint press conference that "The plan views 
civilians as part of the terror threat, while in fact it could be the security 
officers who are the threat [to the people]." 

According to an October 12 Detik.com report, the TNI is already targeting 
traditional Islamic boarding schools or pesantrens. Nurwahid told Detik that he 
had information that Babinsa had been visiting pesantrens to ask about the 
out-of-school activities of the schools' Islamic scholars. At a press 
conference in Jakarta on October 17, House of Representatives speaker Agung 
Laksono said: "No longer [can] they go along with determining which pesantrens 
or schools must be closed down. Don't imitate the measures that were used by 
the New Order." 

Public resistance
Media reports and recent surveys indicate widespread public opposition to the 
plan. A survey by the Indonesian Research Institute released on October 4 found 
that a clear majority believe Koter should be abolished. Of 1137 people from 33 
provinces, 55-58% of respondents disapproved of Koter at district, regional and 
provincial levels. The survey also found that 82.2% of those interviewed agreed 
that the military's main role was to defend the state from external threats. 

In an op-ed piece in the October 8 Jakarta Post titled "Military fight against 
terrorism could be the terror itself", the paper warned that as well as being a 
breach of the reform spirit, the move could herald the return of "secret 
abductions, detention without trial, torture and the extra-judicial killings of 
those who are deemed militants or a threat to the state". 

"Still fresh in the nation's memory are the abductions of at least 12 men, 
mostly activists in a military operation in 1997. An investigation only 
recently declared these men had died in the hands of their abductors, but no 
one has yet been brought to trial for their deaths", said the paper. 

An October 10 Jakarta Post editorial speculated that the president wants to use 
the Bali bombings as cover to test the public's reaction to the revival of the 
TNI's role in domestic security and public order. "Going by media reports", it 
said, "there is indeed a great deal of public resistance to the idea of the 
military renewing its political role, although many people acknowledge the TNI 
could play an important role in the war against terror. But, after the abuses 
of power and rights violations during the Suharto era, people remain wary of 
giving the military too much power. 

"We must use every available means to eradicate terrorism, but at the same time 
we have to stick to our democratic principles. True, the internal security acts 
in Singapore and Malaysia are effective in the short term, but at what cost to 
civil society? The TNI can play a key role in the war against terror without 
returning to it the powers it enjoyed under Suharto. But will the TNI accept 
this?" 

Tougher anti-terror laws
The government was also quick to take advantage of the bombings to gain support 
to enact tough anti-terror laws. 

Speaking at an event by the Islamic Student Association's Corps of Alumni on 
October 15, vice-president Jusuf Kalla didn't mince words: "Like it or not the 
government must take measures which are tough and resolute, no different from 
what was done during the New Order era." 

National Police chief General Sutanto said Indonesia urgently needed tougher 
legislation, pointing to the Internal Security Acts in Malaysia and Singapore, 
as well as tough anti-terror laws in the US and other countries that "give room 
to the police to move quickly and effectively" against the terrorists. "For us, 
in order to arrest a suspect ... we have to submit [evidence] to the court 
first", he told Agence France Presse on October 15. "This needs time ... It is 
not fast enough." On the same day, Sudarsono told the Jakarta Post that the 
government was considering enacting "emergency legislation" to deal with 
terrorism. 

Support also came from former National Intelligence Agency (BIN) director A.M. 
Hendropriyono, who lamented the failure to pass a law that would have allowed 
BIN to detain suspects for limited periods. He said operatives needed the 
ability to "discretely take aside" members of radical organisations in an 
attempt to entice them into providing information from inside terrorist cells. 
Receiving intelligence in this manner, BIN could better anticipate terrorist 
acts before they took place. 

A recent report by a fact-finding team investigating last year's murder of 
renowned human-rights activist Munir found evidence linking BIN to his death 
and strongly recommended that Hendropriyono be questioned by police in relation 
to the case. 

From Green Left Weekly, October 26, 2005. 
Visit the Green Left Weekly home page. 

Send a letter to the editor Join the Green Left discussion list 



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



------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Get fast access to your favorite Yahoo! Groups. Make Yahoo! your home page
http://us.click.yahoo.com/dpRU5A/wUILAA/yQLSAA/BRUplB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

***************************************************************************
Berdikusi dg Santun & Elegan, dg Semangat Persahabatan. Menuju Indonesia yg 
Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. http://www.ppi-india.org
***************************************************************************
__________________________________________________________________________
Mohon Perhatian:

1. Harap tdk. memposting/reply yg menyinggung SARA (kecuali sbg otokritik)
2. Pesan yg akan direply harap dihapus, kecuali yg akan dikomentari.
3. Reading only, http://dear.to/ppi 
4. Satu email perhari: ppiindia-digest@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
5. No-email/web only: ppiindia-nomail@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
6. kembali menerima email: ppiindia-normal@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ppiindia/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    ppiindia-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



** Forum Nasional Indonesia PPI India Mailing List **
** Untuk bergabung dg Milis Nasional kunjungi: 
** Situs Milis: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ppiindia/ **
** Beasiswa dalam negeri dan luar negeri S1 S2 S3 dan post-doctoral 
scholarship, kunjungi 
http://informasi-beasiswa.blogspot.com **

Other related posts:

  • » [nasional_list] [ppiindia] TNI uses Bali bombing to reassert political role