[nasional_list] [ppiindia] Arrests in Papua ambush boon to US ties

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
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  • Date: Mon, 16 Jan 2006 01:01:15 +0100

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**http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/HA14Ae06.html


Arrests in Papua ambush boon to US ties
By Bill Guerin 


JAKARTA - An event in the remote Indonesian province of Papua, thousands of 
kilometers from Washington, seems certain to result in a much stronger position 
for Jakarta within the already fast-improving relationship between the two 
countries. 

Twelve men, including a local rebel operational commander wanted by the United 
States for the murder of two American teachers in a 2002 ambush near the giant 
US-operated Freeport Grasberg copper and gold mine, have been detained. 
Americans Ted Burcon and Rickey Lean Spier were killed in the attack. 

The province is home to a group of poorly armed independence



fighters known as the Free Papua Organization (OPM), which seeks an independent 
state. 

Media reports claim that the US Federal Bureau of Investigation had lured the 
rebels to a hotel in Timika, near the mine, on the promise that they would be 
taken to the US to tell their side of the story. National Police deputy 
spokesman Anton Bahrul Alam confirmed that the FBI had assisted with the 
arrests. 

Suspicions were one thing, but local and FBI investigations found no evidence 
that Indonesian troops were implicated in the 2002 crime. The result of a 
protracted joint Indonesia-FBI investigation was a US grand jury's indictment 
in June 2004 of Antonius Wamang on two counts of murder, eight counts of 
attempted murder and other related offenses in connection with the killings. 

Wamang is one of those detained. Though the 12 have yet to be formally charged 
over the killings, Alam said a fingerprint taken from the scene of the murders 
matched Wamang's. During police interrogation, Wamang is reported to have 
"confessed to firing the automatic weapon" used in the killings. 

Ties between Washington and Jakarta quickly became strained after the killings. 
But a statement at the time from then-US attorney general John Ashcroft also 
cleared the Indonesian military (TNI) of any role in the attack. 

His announcement came just one day after a US congressional subcommittee 
renewed a ban on the provision of funds for the Defense Department's 
International Military Education and Training (IMET) program for Indonesia, 
prompting claims that Washington was sacrificing justice for the victims for 
the sake of resuming bilateral military ties. 

The TNI had blamed the OPM for the attack, although Wamang in an interview with 
the Australian Broadcasting Corp last year claimed that Indonesian troops had 
provided ammunition for the shootings. 

Ashcroft and FBI director Robert Mueller blamed the Papua separatists for the 
Freeport attack and claimed Wamang's indictment illustrated "the importance of 
international cooperation to combat terrorism". 

This cut little ice with local and international rights groups who cast doubt 
on Wamang's involvement in the ambush, with some saying he worked as a military 
informer. They suggested the attack was an effort by TNI to discredit the 
separatist movement or extort money from Freeport. 

TNI gets only 30% of its funding from the central government and makes up the 
shortfall by its widespread involvement in businesses, both legal and illegal. 
Payments for security services received from multinationals, such as those from 
Freeport and from ExxonMobil's natural-gas facilities in Aceh, at the other end 
of the archipelago, have provided TNI with a significant source of income. 

Freeport abruptly stopped these payments shortly before the ambush. To appease 
investor anger and disgust after the meltdown of Enron and WorldCom, the 
administration of US President George W Bush had pushed a bill through Congress 
that demanded greater corporate accountability. The Corporate Fraud Act, 
implemented on July 26, 2002, required the disclosure of such payments, which 
accounts for Freeport's recent admission that it paid out nearly US$20 million 
to military and police officials in Papua between 1998 and 2004. 

Indonesian Attorney General Abdul Rahman Saleh has promised to "look into" 
Freeport's allegations before deciding whether to launch a graft probe. The 
company has denied breaking any laws but the government has said such payments 
are illegal. If individual soldiers of whatever rank kept any of the money 
themselves, it would be a criminal offense. 

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a retired four-star general who last month 
ordered the military to play a greater role in the "war against terrorism", is 
today expected to announce his choice for the next TNI commander-in-chief, a 
key job in the anti-terror campaign. Kusnanto Anggoro, a military analyst with 
the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Jakarta, tips air force 
chief Air Marshal Djoko Suyanto to replace General Endriartono Sutarto, who 
tendered his resignation to former president Megawati Sukarnoputri in September 
2004 but is still serving as TNI commander. 

Megawati stirred up controversy when, although only a caretaker leader after 
losing the presidential election, she approved Sutarto's resignation and 
recommended hardliner General Ryamizard as his successor. Yudhoyono annulled 
Megawati's decision when he took over in October 2004, a move that angered many 
lawmakers.

Why now?
One clue to the answer to the most obvious question - why did police act now, 
so long after the incident? - may lie in statements from both governments.

"Seeking justice for this crime remains a priority for the United States, and 
we are pleased that the Indonesian government also recognizes the importance of 
this case," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said. "We will continue 
to follow this case closely." 

Commenting on a proposed visit to Jakarta by US Secretary of State Condoleezza 
Rice, Foreign Affairs Minister Hassan Wirayuda noted a "growing and accepted 
view in the US to see Indonesia in a much broader context rather than in 
snapshots of events like human-rights violations ... and military reform". 

Rice had reinstated full IMET eligibility for Indonesia, and Wirayuda described 
her planned visit as one that would "underline the importance of the 
relationship between Indonesia and the US, and the growing appreciation of 
Indonesia by the US". 

The United States has shown a long-term commitment to post-tsunami 
reconstruction in Aceh, support for Indonesia's reform agenda and for the 
country's efforts to reform its justice system and military. 

The arrests may well lead to Jakarta's closest ever relationship with 
Washington as partisan differences in both governments gradually dissolve. 
Aloysius Renwarin, a lawyer representing the 12, said, "They are being 
sacrificed for the relationship between the US and Indonesia." Yet the arrests 
alone will not be enough to shore up US support for even deeper ties with the 
military. 

Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy, the most vocal opponent of US funding of IMET 
for Indonesia in Congress, is reported to have called the arrests "a step in 
the right direction" though noting that "there are so many unanswered questions 
in this case, including who these people are and what role they may have had in 
these crimes." 

Washington will press for its pound of flesh by demanding that Wamang, at 
least, be tried by a US court. If convicted he could face the death penalty. 
Although Indonesia has no extradition treaty with the US it has been the scene 
of at least one infamous Central Intelligence Agency "rendering", when alleged 
al-Qaeda operative Omar al Faruq was spirited away to a secret location. 

A politically stable and US-friendly Indonesia would help US strategic and 
economic interests in the region, although the relationship is certain to 
remain a very different kettle of fish to the two other notable regional 
relationships the United States has, with its "sheriffs" in Singapore and 
Sydney. 

Bill Guerin, a Jakarta correspondent for Asia Times Online since 2000, has 
worked in Indonesia for 20 years as a journalist. He has been published by the 
BBC on East Timor and specializes in business/economic and political analysis 
in Indonesia. 

(Copyright 2006 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us 
for information on sales, syndication and republishing .)

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



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