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Subject: GLW/Max Lane: 'East Timor Syndrome' Sparks Spat
Received from Joyo Indonesian News
Green Left Weekly Issue cover-dated October 22, 2003
INDONESIA: 'East Timor Syndrome' Sparks Spat
BY MAX LANE
JAKARTA — On October 13, the Indonesian armed forces (TNI) announced
the cancellation of a November 6 visit to Australian Defence Force
facilities in Perth by a TNI delegation. The decision was in response to
the Australian government's policy of vetting individual TNI participants
for any joint military programs.
The vetting policy was announced by the Australian government in August
during the public uproar that followed Canberra's resumption of
cooperation with the TNI, including the notorious Kopassus special forces.
The Australian government acknowledged that "individual" TNI
and Kopassus personnel had been involved in human rights violations across
Indonesia and had links with militias in East Timor and Sulawesi. However,
it claimed that the TNI as an institution was not responsible for the
crimes.
Given that several senior TNI officers, including commander of Kopassus
Major-General Sriyanto, are accused of human rights abuses, the Indonesian
government and the TNI were never going to accept such a policy. Sriyanto
is about to face trial for his involvement in a massacre of civilian
demonstrators in 1984.
In announcing the cancellation of the Perth visit, the TNI referred to
rallies being organised against the delegation, which was expected to be
led by Sriyanto. This reference was a jibe against the inability of Prime
Minister John Howard's government to overcome opposition in Australia to
the restoration of close military relations with the TNI.
The Australian people's deep-seated suspicion of the TNI and opposition
to Jakarta's repressive policies in Aceh and West Papua are a result of
the almost 30 years of public campaigning by the solidarity movement in
favour of the East Timor people's right to national self-determination. It
has created an "East Timor syndrome" in Australia.
The Howard government's move to restore high-level military cooperation
with the Indonesian government is a return to Australian foreign policy
between 1975 and 1999. During that period, the Suharto dictatorship was at
war with the people of East Timor and successive Australian governments
— Labor and Coalition — allied themselves with Suharto in that unjust
war.
Today, the Indonesian government is waging a war against the people of
Aceh and West Papua. The Australian government is again allying itself
with Jakarta by increasing military cooperation.
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