| Subject: Baltimore Sun: Tie Indonesia Aid
to Rights Reforms
Received from Joyo Indonesia News
The Baltimore Sun September 3, 2002
Tie Indonesia Aid to Rights Reforms
By Mike Jendrzejczyk
WASHINGTON - Will U.S. training improve the Indonesian military's
terrible human-rights record?
During a visit to Jakarta in early August, Secretary of State Colin
Powell vowed he would get Congress to restart a military training program
suspended in 1992 after Indonesian troops committed atrocities in East
Timor. He argued that exposing officers to democratic institutions and
human-rights values would have beneficial effects.
But this is a risky and questionable proposition at best. American
taxpayers could end up helping to train killers and torturers. By resuming
training without significant progress by the Indonesian government to
control and discipline the military, the Bush administration risks
undermining those working for democratic reform in Indonesia. Greater
reform is the best way to safeguard against Islamic radicalism.
Among those welcoming moves by the Senate Appropriations Committee to
lift restrictions on International Military Education and Training (IMET)
is Brig. Gen. Tono Suratman, deputy spokesman for the Indonesian armed
forces.
But General Suratman was indicted for crimes committed in East Timor in
1999. He was then the commander for East Timor when Indonesian troops and
proxy militia groups launched a campaign of terror following the
U.N.-administered referendum on independence. (At that time, he was a
colonel, but he later was promoted for his misdeeds.)
Congress will take up the foreign aid bill for fiscal year 2003 when it
reconvenes. The administration is asking for $400,000 for IMET in
Indonesia, with no strings attached.
This is the dilemma facing policymakers: the United States wants to
strengthen ties with the Indonesian military without giving it greater
legitimacy and symbolic support. Yet the decision to expand security
assistance is seen by many in Indonesia as a vote of confidence in the
military and endorsement of its prominent role.
Despite decades of U.S. training of military officers during Suharto's
rule, there is no clear evidence that abuses by the military were in any
way reduced as a result.
Now, with a democratically elected government in Indonesia, the
Pentagon argues that things have changed. But none of the diplomats or
human-rights lawyers I spoke with in Jakarta this spring believed
fundamental military reform was likely before the elections in 2004, when
President Megawati Sukarnoputri will be counting on the army's support.
The Pentagon wants to train Indonesian officers in the United States
and teach them about internationally recognized human rights, military
justice systems and "fostering greater respect for the principle of
civilian control of the military."
But Indonesian trainees would return to a country where the armed
forces remain the single most powerful institution, where there is a
culture of impunity for serious crimes committed by troops against
Indonesian civilians and so-called "separatists" in Aceh, West
Papua and elsewhere, where civilian courts are corrupt and woefully
ill-equipped to handle prosecutions of security officials and where the
top generals involved in atrocities in East Timor haven't even been
indicted.
In such an environment, can any amount of U.S. training make a
significant difference?
Washington was stunned when an Indonesian special ad hoc court
acquitted five military and police officials of a church massacre in East
Timor. The court acted just days after Mr. Powell's visit, and while the
U.S. Pacific commander, Adm. Thomas Fargo, was in Indonesia, warning that
closer ties with the Pentagon would depend on "accountability and
reform."
The State Department expressed disappointment over the verdicts, but
neither Mr. Powell nor the Pentagon backed away from their promise to
restore IMET. By seeking to lift restrictions on IMET, conditioned on
accountability for abuses committed in Indonesia and East Timor, while at
the same time calling for greater accountability, the administration is
sending mixed signals.
The United States should send a consistent message. It should provide
funding for the Indonesian police, now separated from the military but
urgently in need of training and technical support. More than $31 million
for the Indonesian police has already been appropriated or is pending in
next year's aid bill.
But Congress should maintain human-rights conditions on lethal arms
sales and supplies to the Indonesian military - both commercial and
U.S.-funded. The administration backs these restrictions.
Congress should also adopt the same modest conditions, proposed by Sen.
Patrick Leahy of Vermont, on resumption of IMET. The president is required
to certify that military personnel credibly alleged to have committed
gross human-rights violations have been suspended and that military
authorities are fully cooperating with prosecutions of abusers.
Indonesians are trying to rebuild their country's civil institutions
after more than 30 years of authoritarian rule. The United States should
keep up the pressure for effective civilian control of the military as
essential for democratization.
Mike Jendrzejczyk is the Washington director for Human Rights Watch's
Asia Division.
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