IHRN Media Release
For Immediate Release
U.S.-made weapons to be used in Indonesian
military war on Aceh
May 13, 2003--Indonesia is gearing up for resumption of a full-scale
war in Aceh, a resource-rich region of the archipelago where ExxonMobil
has been charged with colluding with the brutal Indonesian military (TNI)
occupation. According to press accounts, U.S.-made weapons will be used in
the assault. Almost 7,000 new troops were sent to Aceh in the past few
days and up to 50,000 personnel will be sent in the coming offensive. The
military currently has 30,000 troops and 12,000 police stationed in Aceh.
TNI officials have boasted they plan to crush the armed Free Aceh Movement
(GAM) within six months.
As reported in the Indonesian press, U.S.-made military aircraft being
readied for the scorched earth assault include two F-16 Fighting Falcon
multi-role fighter jets, six OV-10 Bronco counter-insurgency aircraft,
five S-58 Twinpack helicopters, and six C-130 Hercules tactical transport
planes.
"The U.S. government should condemn Indonesia's planned use of
U.S.-made aircraft against the Acehnese, this war will only serve to
recruit more civilians to the armed resistance" said Kurt Biddle,
Coordinator of the Indonesia Human Rights Network. "The Indonesian
government should be strongly encouraged to pursue a peaceful solution to
the conflict in Aceh and also be told to end the crackdown on peaceful
Acehnese activists working to create an alternative to armed resistance."
Last December, the Indonesian government and GAM signed a Cessation of
Hostilities Agreement (CoHA), which led to a dramatic decrease in the
number of causalities in Aceh. The CoHA did not deal with several issues
that could not be agreed upon, including whether Aceh will remain part of
Indonesia or be a separate nation, as GAM and the majority of Acehnese are
demanding.
The Indonesian government set a May 12 deadline for GAM to abandon its
call for independence and lay down arms as a precondition for a return to
the negotiation table. GAM proposed a meeting after May 12, but Jakarta
rejected this offer. Indonesia has violated the CoHA by sending new troops
to Aceh and arresting peaceful human rights defenders and other political
activists. More than 50 international peace monitors reportedly withdrew
from Aceh yesterday.
The U.S. Department of State is poised to consult Congress regarding
resumption of the International Military Education and Training (IMET)
program for Indonesia. Congress approved funds for the program for the
current fiscal year, but because of apparent TNI involvement in the
murders of three people (including two Americans) in Papua last August,
the State Department promised it would consult Congress before spending
any IMET funds allocated for the TNI. The FBI investigation into the Papua
attacks is far from over, and with Indonesia abandoning a peaceful
solution to the Aceh conflict, now is not the time to resume training for
the Indonesian military.
Human rights groups estimate 1,000 people (mostly civilians) were
killed in 2001 and over 1,300 in 2002. Amnesty International and Human
Rights Watch have documented systematic use of torture, rape and
extrajudicial execution by the Indonesian military throughout its campaign
there.
Similar terror tactics, along with U.S. weapons, were used in the
subjugation of the East Timorese people during Indonesia¹s 24-year
occupation of that former Portuguese territory. The U.S. cut off all arms
sales to Indonesia in 1999, after the TNI and its militia proxies razed
East Timor and drove hundreds of thousands of civilians from their homes
following the country¹s vote for independence from Indonesia.
The Indonesia Human Rights Network (IHRN) is a U.S.-based grassroots
organization working to influence U.S. foreign policy and international
economic interests to support democracy, demilitarization, and justice
through accountability and rule of law in Indonesia. IHRN seeks to end
armed forces repression in Indonesia by exposing it to international
scrutiny. IHRN works with and advocates on behalf of people throughout the
Indonesian archipelago to strengthen civil society.
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