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- <text>
- <title>
- Indonesia And East Timor
- </title>
- <article>
- <hdr>
- Human Rights Watch World Report 1992
- Asia Watch: Indonesia and East Timor
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Human Rights Developments
- </p>
- <p> Its new membership on the U.N. Human Rights Commission
- notwithstanding, the Indonesian government continued to violate
- fundamental rights of its citizens, including the right to
- life, the right not to be subjected to torture, arbitrary arrest
- or imprisonment, and the rights to freedom of expression,
- assembly and association.
- </p>
- <p> Summary executions by the Indonesian army continued to take
- place in the territory of East Timor. They also occurred in
- Aceh, the "special region" (as opposed to a province) of 3.8
- million people on the northern tip of Sumatra where an
- independence movement called the Aceh/Sumatra National
- Liberation Front, more commonly known by its Indonesian name of
- Aceh Merdeka, has been engaged since 1977 in a low-level armed
- struggle against the Indonesian armed forces.
- </p>
- <p> In East Timor, between seventy-five and one-hundred people
- are believed to have been shot dead when Indonesian security
- forces opened fire on a peaceful demonstration on November 12
- at the Santa Cruz cemetery, near Dili, the capital. Thousands
- had turned a memorial mass for Sebastio Gomes Rangel, a young
- man killed by Indonesian forces two weeks earlier, into a
- massive political demonstration in support of independence. The
- march to the cemetery to lay flowers on Sebastio's grave had
- finished when hundreds of troops massed there began shooting.
- The Indonesian government's death toll was nineteen, but no
- official list of the dead had been compiled by early December,
- and there were many unconfirmed reports of bodies having been
- thrown in mass graves. A New Zealand citizen was killed and two
- American journalists were injured when they were beaten up at
- the scene by Indonesian troops. The Indonesian military almost
- immediately sent a team headed by the deputy chief of
- intelligence to investigate the November 12 killings, and
- President Suharto, after much international pressure, appointed
- a second commission headed by a military judge. At the same
- time, however, official spokespersons were blaming the marchers
- for the violence. Neither commission could be considered
- independent. More than 280 people were reported arrested; in
- December, the Indonesian government acknowledged still holding
- forty-two. A demonstration by East Timorese students living in
- Java was held in Jakarta on November 19 to protest the killings.
- The peaceful protest was broken up by force, and seventy
- students were arrested. At the beginning of December, twenty-one
- remained in detention in the Metropolitan Jakarta Police Command
- without access to lawyers or family, with one man held in
- solitary confinement.
- </p>
- <p> In Aceh, the current round of ambushes of the police and
- military by Aceh Merdeka, and retaliatory and "counter-terror"
- killings by Indonesian security forces, began in mid-1989.
- Estimates of those killed on both sides over the last
- two-and-a-half years range from four hundred to over one
- thousand, but no organization has been able to conduct a
- thorough, impartial and systematic investigation in the
- districts most affected. In late May, when an Asia Watch
- representative visited the region, the army was exhorting
- villagers to take the law into their own hands to "exterminate"
- members of the guerrilla group. In one case reported by the
- local press on May 21, security forces stood by as villagers
- lynched two unarmed supporters of the movement. Asia Watch
- talked to residents who had seen bodies along the road in Aceh
- and to lawyers representing families whose relatives had
- disappeared after having been taken into custody by the armed
- forces. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) was
- able to visit Aceh once, in mid-July, to interview persons
- detained in connection with the conflict, in what was expected
- to be the first in a series of regular visits by the
- humanitarian organization, but a second visit has been blocked
- by the Indonesian military.
- </p>
- <p> Trials of suspected supporters of Aceh Merdeka began in
- March and are continuing. The trials have been marked by the use
- of coerced "confessions" and defense lawyers who were warned by
- the government against making any spirited defense. The
- government brought to trial only those against whom it believed
- it had sufficient evidence to convict. Dozens, perhaps hundreds,
- of others were held in unacknowledged military detention, either
- to be released in large groups when the military decided that
- they had not been involved in Aceh Merdeka, or to remain
- "disappeared." Between September 1990 and October 1991, some
- 623 people were freed, in five groups, after highly publicized
- ceremonies in which they were obliged to take loyalty oaths to
- the Indonesian government, despite not having been convicted of
- any crime. Most had spent six months or more in incommunicado
- detention.
- </p>
- <p> A death under mysterious circumstances took place in Irian
- Jaya, where an armed independence movement is also in place.
- The Indonesian army reported that it had found Melkianus Salosa,
- a leader of the Organisasi Papua Merdeka (Free Papua Movement),
- dead on August 20, 1991. Salosa had reportedly escaped on
- August 4 from a military-intelligence detention center run by
- the No. 8 Regional Military Command in Jayapura. A man who had
- escaped with Salosa who later turned himself in had led soldiers
- to Salosa's hideout in Aba Gunung, Abepura, Irian Jaya.
- </p>
- <p> Far too many deaths of criminal suspects continue to take
- place at the hands of the Indonesian police. The usual
- explanation is that the suspects were shot resisting arrest or
- trying to escape, and in such cases no action is taken against
- the police officers involved. In some cases, when deaths appear
- to take place as a result of torture, police are prosecuted
- and, if convicted, given lenient sentences. Between July and
- September, for example, at least ten deaths of criminal
- suspects in the course of arrest or interrogation were reported
- in the Indonesian press. In March, a young man named Beni,
- detained for the attempted stabbing of a police sergeant, was
- tortured continuously from 8:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. in a police
- station in North Pontianak, Kalimantan. He was kicked,
- pistol-whipped and beaten with chains by three police officers
- until he collapsed and died. A cellmate was warned not to say
- anything about the incident. The family, however, complained,
- and the three officers were arrested and went on trial in July.
- At the close of the trial, the military prosecutor requested
- three-year sentences for each man.
- </p>
- <p> Indonesians arrested on subversion charges for nonviolent
- activities received much heavier sentences. On May 23, the
- Indonesian Supreme Court reversed a reduction in sentence for
- four men from Irian Jaya accused of distributing T-shirts which
- bore the flag of "West Melanesia," the name of the state that
- some independence activists want to establish in Irian Jaya.
- Yakob Rumbiak, Ik Yoran, Pilemon Kambu and Habel Tanati
- originally had been given prison sentences of seventeen,
- thirteen, eleven and nine years by a court in Jayapura. The
- High Court in Jayapura had reduced the sentences by more than
- half in August 1990, but the Supreme Court reinstated the
- initial sentences. The T-shirts had been made in time for
- December 14, 1989, the first anniversary of the raising of the
- West Melanesian flag at a sports stadium in Jayapura, the
- capital. In August 1991, the Supreme Court upheld the prison
- sentence of eight-and-a-half years that had been handed down
- in October 1990 for Bonar Tigor Naipospos, a Yogyakarta student.
- Bonar was accused of possessing books that smacked of
- Marxist-Leninist teachings and taking part in a study group in
- which "Marxist" themes were discussed, such as the view that the
- lot of the Indonesian laborer under the Suharto government is
- little better than it was under the Dutch colonial regime.
- </p>
- <p> On April 8, Arswendo Atmowiloto, a poet, short-story writer
- and editor of a tabloid weekly, was sentenced to five years in
- prison on charges of insulting a religion. The charge was based
- on his publication of a poll among his subscribers of the
- leaders they most admired. The Prophet Mohammed came in eleventh
- in the poll, behind President Suharto, Saddam Hussein and a rock
- singer. The poll caused demonstrations in many of Indonesia's
- major cities.
- </p>
- <p> Some thirty-three suspected members or supporters of the
- banned Indonesian Communist Party remain in prison, including
- seven sentenced to death. Two men, Rewang, age 63, and Marto
- Suwandi, age 69, were released on July 24, four years after
- their sentences had expired. Prison officials refused to comment
- on the reasons for the delay, but it was believed linked to the
- retroactive application of a 1987 presidential decree banning
- routine reduction of sentences (remissions) for anyone
- sentenced to a life term or death.
- </p>
- <p> In addition to those formally arrested on subversion
- charges, many other critics and political opponents of President
- Suharto or the Indonesian military continue to face restrictions
- on their civil rights. The moderate opposition grouping known
- as the "Petition of 50," named after a petition they submitted
- to President Suharto in 1980 that questioned his authority to
- decide on certain policies, continued to be banned from
- traveling abroad and receiving loans from banks. While the
- Indonesian press covered its activities and demands more
- thoroughly than at any time in the last decade, members were
- told that they would have to apologize to the president for the
- offense caused by their petition if remaining restrictions were
- to be lifted. In addition, some 17,000 people remain on the
- Indonesian government's immigration blacklist, many for
- political reasons. The blacklist prevents them from entering or
- leaving the country.
- </p>
- <p> In October, as the political atmosphere heated up in
- anticipation of the 1992 parliamentary election campaign, local
- authorities in Magelang, Central Java banned four Muslim
- preachers from giving public religious lectures (pengajian).
- Pengajian have often been a forum for sharp critiques of
- government policy. In another effort to ensure uniformity of
- political views prior to the 1992 elections, the government
- required that all those selected as candidates by Indonesia's
- three legal political parties go through a screening procedure
- called litsus (short for penelitian khusus, or special
- investigation) to determine whether they had any involvement in
- the 1965 coup attempt which the Indonesian government has
- blamed on the Indonesian Communist Party. Senior figures in the
- ruling Golkar party and former Golkar ministers were exempted
- from the screening.
- </p>
- <p> Although the mainstream press was unusually lively in 1991,
- formal censorship, if anything, intensified. The attorney
- general's office banned ten books during the year. One, banned
- in September, a translation of Ersatz Capitalism in Southeast
- Asia by the Japanese scholar Yoshihara Kunio, was said to
- contain material which discredited the nation and the president
- and made invidious comparisons between the latter and former
- President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines. The attorney
- general's office said another book banned at the same time,
- entitled The Gulf War: Islam will Return Triumphant, could
- damage Indonesian-Saudi relations because it was critical of
- the Saudi royal family.
- </p>
- <p> Also in September, an article on the killings in Aceh
- published in the Bangkok English-language newspaper The Nation,
- drew a formal protest from the Indonesian ambassador in
- Thailand and a response from the Thai government that it could
- not place restrictions on Thailand's free press.
- </p>
- <p> The Indonesian government made numerous efforts to restrict
- freedom of expression about land disputes. In February 1991, in
- Bengkulu Selatan, villagers were forced to retract a letter
- they had sent in May 1990 to "Box 5000" (a government
- post-office box for receiving corruption complaints) about the
- failure of local officials to resolve a land dispute. Their
- complaint resulted in an investigation by the provincial
- government--and subsequent pressure from the officials at
- fault until the villagers backed down. (Tempo, March 9, 1991)
- </p>
- <p> In Semarang in February, students were interrogated by the
- police and copies of a 1991 calendar called "Land for the
- People" were confiscated because of the way the calendar
- caricatured officials. It showed President Suharto sitting on
- and squashing wailing peasants, while his wife was dressed in
- a bikini and swinging a golf club. Criminal charges against the
- student distributors were later dropped, but the calendar
- remained banned.
- </p>
- <p> Freedom of assembly was also restricted. On February 14,
- security forces broke up a peaceful march on the American,
- Japanese and British Embassies to protest the Gulf War, and six
- people were arrested and briefly detained.
- </p>
- <p> Freedom of association for trade unionists became a major
- issue in 1991. Even as Indonesian Manpower Minister Cosmos
- Batubara was selected to chair the International Labor
- Organization's annual conference, the right of Indonesian
- workers to strike, ostensibly protected by Indonesia's
- Constitution, continued to be violently suppressed. The military
- was routinely summoned to end strikes by workers protesting low
- wages, compulsory overtime, and other violations of Indonesian
- law. In many cases, military intervention in labor disputes was
- preceded or followed by interrogations of strike leaders at
- district military headquarters. Often, the labor leaders
- involved were coerced into signing letters of resignation. In
- June, nine workers at P.T. Evershinetex, a textile factory, were
- reported tortured by District Military Command 061 in Bogor, and
- five workers at a factory called P.T. DWA were reported to have
- been intimidated and beaten at subdistrict military units in
- West Jakarta. In August, after the government sent two hundred
- soldiers to suppress a strike at the tiremaker P.T. Gadjah
- Tunggal near Jakarta, nine workers were reported to have been
- detained and intimidated by security forces, and one of them
- was held for three days. Despite explicit government
- acknowledgment that wage levels frequently are below the level
- necessary to support the minimum physical requirements of
- workers, and despite legal protection of the right to strike,
- Admiral Sudomo, coordinating minister for general policy and
- security, and Manpower Minister Batubara continue to assert that
- strikes are unnecessary. They openly rationalize the use of
- military force in ending the strikes as a justifiable precaution
- against public disturbance. At a seminar in Jakarta on October
- 16, Batubara defended the government's use of troops: "If you
- go on strike in the streets it will disturb people and
- neighboring factories. It's the security officers' job to take
- care of public order."
- </p>
- <p> In June, Saut Aritonang, the leader of the independent
- Indonesian trade union Solidarity (Setia Kawan), was taken at
- gunpoint from a taxi, blindfolded and held captive for three
- days. Although the identity of his captors was unclear to him,
- a military intelligence source was reported to have said
- privately during his absence that the union leader was being
- held by the regional military command. Aritonang said that he
- had been interrogated about the activities of Solidarity and had
- been threatened with death should he continue to interfere in
- the government's development plans. The military publicly denied
- any involvement in the abduction.
- </p>
- <p> The abduction of Aritonang follows a pattern of military and
- police harassment of Solidarity members and officials which has
- plagued the independent union since its founding in 1990. In
- addition to "preventive questioning" of union members at police
- centers, the government has declared that it considers the
- union illegal, implying that it will not tolerate any expansion
- of the organization. Although freedom to organize is guaranteed
- by the Indonesian Constitution, the Indonesian government has
- put in place such onerous labor-union registration requirements
- that the only union allowed in practice is the
- government-manipulated SPSI (All Indonesia Workers' Union). A
- 1987 law requires, among other things, that a union have offices
- in at least twenty of Indonesia's twenty-seven provinces, with
- at least one thousand company-level units, before it can bargain
- on behalf of workers. By intimidating Solidarity, at present the
- only alternative to SPSI, the government makes it virtually
- impossible for the organization to expand to the extent
- necessary for official recognition. The government's response
- to Solidarity shows that any stirrings of a free, independent
- and democratic trade-union movement will be actively suppressed.
- </p>
- <p>The Right to Monitor
- </p>
- <p> Human rights monitoring by domestic organizations was
- restricted. No Indonesian human rights organization operates in
- East Timor, in part because permission to do so would almost
- surely be denied, but also because Indonesian human rights
- organizations are sensitive to the problems they would have
- working in a territory where most victims of human rights
- abuses would feel more comfortable talking to a Timorese priest
- than to an Indonesian lawyer.
- </p>
- <p> Lawyers from the Medan, North Sumatra branch of Indonesia's
- largest human rights organization, the Legal Aid Institute,
- were not allowed to defend any suspected members of Aceh
- Merdeka; the ban extended to the Medan office's outpost in the
- town of Lhokseumawe, Aceh. After the article about human rights
- abuses in Aceh appeared in the Bangkok newspaper, the head of
- the Medan office of the Legal Aid Institute, who was quoted in
- the article, was "invited" by the local military commander to
- army headquarters and criticized about his lack of nationalist
- feeling.
- </p>
- <p> Following the East Timor massacre, two human rights
- activists were intensively interrogated in Jakarta, accused of
- having organized the demonstration of East Timorese students on
- November 19. H.J.C. Princen of the Institute for the Defense of
- Human Rights and Indro Tjahjono of the organization INFIGHT
- were interrogated for eight hours on November 20, not only about
- their activities in relation to East Timor but also about all
- of their other human rights work. As of early December, they
- were having to report to the internal security agency
- BAKORSTANAS every day, a clear form of intimidation.
- </p>
- <p>U.S. Policy
- </p>
- <p> The United States maintains friendly relations with
- Indonesia, and the Bush Administration, like the Reagan
- Administration before it, has been reluctant to criticize the
- government of President Suharto. Indonesia's support of the
- allied Gulf War policy and its constructive role in working
- toward a settlement of the Cambodian conflict may have increased
- that reluctance.
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration goes out of its way to accentuate
- the positive. In a submission to Congress outlining security
- assistance requested for fiscal year 1992, the State Department
- and Defense Security Assistance Agency noted, "The debate over
- political, economic and social issues is broadening, and the
- Parliament has somewhat enhanced its dialogue with the
- Executive. Reports of human rights violations declined in recent
- years, particularly in East Timor." The request for $2.3 million
- for fiscal year 1992's International Military Education and
- Training (IMET) program, made before the November 12 massacre
- in Dili, nevertheless came at a time when killings,
- disappearances, arbitrary arrests and unfair trials in Aceh were
- making 1991 a very bad year for human rights in Indonesia. The
- statement noted that IMET "exposes Indonesians to U.S.
- traditions of democracy, human rights and civilian control of
- the military." Given what happened in Aceh and East Timor, that
- exposure seems to have had little influence. Indonesia received
- $1.9 million in IMET assistance in fiscal year 1991.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. Embassy and State Department desk officers have
- been ready and willing to check on reports of restrictions on
- human rights monitors, but the State Department generally has
- not gone far enough to condemn military abuses in Aceh or East
- Timor. An exception was the reaction to the Dili massacre. On
- November 13, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher
- expressed concern over the "tragic loss of life" in the massacre
- of the day before, although he cited contradictory reports on
- what had caused the shootings to occur. On November 14, the
- Administration said it was "gratified" at the announcement of
- an Indonesian government investigation into the killings, and
- urged Jakarta to discipline those responsible for using
- "excessive force." The same day, State Department spokesman
- Boucher increased the public criticism of Indonesia, saying that
- "nothing that may have taken place could justify a military
- reaction of this magnitude, resulting in such a large loss of
- life by unarmed civilians." The State Department also made a
- point of summoning the Indonesian ambassador to express concern,
- and sent three officials to Dili to investigate the matter for
- themselves. Given the magnitude of the slaughter, the
- Administration should have gone beyond these welcome gestures
- to insist on an international inquiry, to suspend IMET until the
- results of the investigation were made known, and to resume it
- only if there were reasons to believe that the military had
- acted responsibly.
- </p>
- <p> Senator Clairborne Pell, chair of the Foreign Relations
- Committee, who sharply condemned the massacre and declared that
- "the violence in East Timor casts serious doubt on Indonesia's
- ability to be a civilized nation," introduced a resolution
- calling for a suspension of U.S. military aid to Indonesia
- under the IMET program. However, the Administration opposed the
- cutoff in IMET funds, arguing on November 14, in the words of
- State Department spokesman Boucher, that U.S. training of the
- Indonesian military contributed to its "professionalism." As
- ultimately adopted by the full Senate, the Pell resolution
- urged an immediate reassessment of the IMET program, as well as
- U.S. support for investigations into the atrocity under United
- Nations auspices. In a letter to Secretary of State James Baker,
- Senator Patrick Leahy, the chair of the Senate Appropriations
- Subcommittee on Foreign Operations, indicated that he would
- propose a prohibition on any military assistance to Indonesia
- for fiscal year 1992 if the Indonesian government failed to
- conduct a full investigation and punish those responsible. (The
- Senate bill was adopted on November 21. Senator Leahy wrote to
- Secretary Baker on November 20: "The U.S. Government should make
- it absolutely clear that there must be a thorough, prompt and
- credible investigation if an assistance relationship with
- Indonesia is to be maintained.")
- </p>
- <p> House members were also outspoken in condemning both the
- October 28 shooting and the massacre on November 12. Ranking
- members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee urged the
- Indonesian government to "hold accountable those military
- personnel responsible...and release immediately those who were
- arrested on November 12 for their participation in a peaceful
- funeral procession." The Committee approved a measure similar
- to the one passed in the Senate, specifically urging the
- Administration to make future IMET funding contingent on the
- outcome of the Indonesian government's investigation.
- </p>
- <p> The State Department was notably lukewarm about pressing for
- access by the ICRC to Aceh or criticizing the military for
- failing to allow a second visit. Assistant Secretary of State
- for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs Richard Schifter noted
- in written response to congressional questions that there was
- nothing to suggest human rights violations on a "massive" scale
- in Aceh.
- </p>
- <p>The Work of Asia Watch
- </p>
- <p> Much of Asia Watch's work during the year focused on the
- human rights violations in Aceh. A report issued in late
- December 1990, Human Rights Violations in Aceh, was widely
- covered by the international press in January and was used by
- diplomatic circles in Jakarta to press the Indonesian government
- to allow the ICRC into Aceh. A follow-up report, based on a
- visit to Aceh and Malaysia (where some Acehnese involved in the
- conflict have fled) in late May and early June, was issued in
- mid-June and also was widely covered by the press. The second
- report was used in a campaign to persuade the Malaysian
- government not to deport boat people from Aceh whose return had
- been requested by the Indonesian government. As of December,
- some two hundred refugees had been permitted to stay in
- Malaysia.
- </p>
- <p> Following the May-June visit to Aceh, Asia Watch met with
- the Australian foreign minister and other senior government
- officials in Canberra to raise concerns about the human rights
- situation there. Asia Watch staff also met with senior staff of
- the Indonesian Embassy in Washington to discuss human rights
- violations in Aceh.
- </p>
- <p> After the killings in East Timor on October 28, Asia Watch
- wrote the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta, urging it to press for an
- investigation. After the massacre two weeks later, Asia Watch
- helped to disseminate information on developments through an
- international network of human rights organizations, and sent
- a statement outlining what an independent, impartial
- investigation should consist of to every major newspaper in
- Jakarta. After East Timorese demonstrators were arrested in
- Jakarta on November 20, Asia Watch sent a formal letter of
- protest to Foreign Minister Ali Alatas. A major report on the
- killings and their aftermath was issued on December 12, in
- cooperation with the Human Rights Council of Australia.
- </p>
- <p> Short reports were also issued during the year on
- freedom-of-expression cases, such as the calendar with the
- caricatures of government officials and the trial of the
- newspaper editor who conducted the poll of his readers.
- </p>
- <p> In late October, Asia Watch formally requested permission to
- visit Indonesia and East Timor and hold talks with senior
- government and military officials in both places. There was no
- response by the end of the year.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-