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Groups Urge Congress to Restrict Assistance to Indonesian
Military in Legislative Mark-up
For Immediate Release
Contact: John M. Miller (718) 596-7668; (917) 690-4391 (cell)
May 18 - Human rights, religious and other organizations today
urged a key congressional subcommittee to reinstate restrictions on
U.S. military assistance to Indonesia as the best way "to influence
positive change in Indonesia and to encourage justice for the people
of Timor-Leste."
The 15 organizations wrote the House of Representatives
Subcommittee on Foreign Operations Appropriations that, "Legislated
restrictions on FMF [Foreign Military Financing] and lethal defense
exports, without a national security waiver, represent the most
important leverage the U.S. Congress can exercise..."
The subcommittee is scheduled to meet tomorrow morning to mark-up
the Fiscal Year 2007 foreign aid appropriations bill, the first step
in determining what, if any, congressionally-mandated restrictions
will apply to U.S. military assistance to Indonesia.
The groups wrote that they "strongly disagree" with the
Administration's decision, announced last week, to provide up to $19
million for the Indonesian military through a new Pentagon program
"to build foreign military force capacity.... This amount dwarfs
recent assistance levels," and that "this appropriation further
invalidates any justification to comply with the Administration's
$6.5 million request for FMF for Indonesia for FY07, which itself
represents more than a six-and-a-half fold increase over the FY06
estimated expenditure."
The Administration's actions "illustrate moves toward
unrestrained engagement with the TNI, and assume that this will
somehow result in reform. The history of past engagement shows that
such optimism is not warranted," the letter said.
Despite pledging last November to "carefully calibrate" any
assistance, "the Administration has no benchmarks that we are aware
of by which to measure progress in military and human rights reform
in Indonesia," the groups wrote.
In addition to assistance through the new Pentagon program, other
recent Administration moves include waiving human rights conditions
on military assistance to Indonesia only two days after the 2006
Foreign Operations Appropriations Act was signed last November and
the participation of the commander of Kopassus, the Indonesian
military’s notorious special forces unit, in the Pentagon's annual
Pacific Area Special Operation Conference (PASOC) in April. This
week, the Indonesian military for the first time is participating in
the Cobra Gold regional military exercise with the United States and
other countries.
The letter was coordinated by the East Timor and Indonesia Action
Network. The full text and a list of signers are available
below.
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18 May 2006
The Honorable Jim Kolbe, Chairperson
The Honorable Nita Lowey, Ranking Member
Foreign Operations, Export Financing and Related Programs
Subcommittee Committee on Appropriations
United States House of Representatives
Dear Representative Kolbe and Representative Lowey:
As organizations with longstanding concerns about human rights
and justice in Indonesia and Timor-Leste, we urge you to fully
restrict foreign military financing (FMF) and the export of lethal
defense articles for the Indonesian military in the FY07 Foreign
Operations Appropriations Act. We strongly urge that a national
security waiver of these restrictions not be included in the Act.
The State Department has failed to follow through on its pledge,
given when it exercised the waiver only two days after the 2006
Foreign Operations Appropriations Act was implemented last November,
to “carefully calibrate” any assistance for the Indonesian military
(TNI). Rather, the Administration has no benchmarks that we are
aware of by which to measure progress in military and human rights
reform in Indonesia, and none are planned. Actions thus far by the
Administration illustrate moves toward unrestrained engagement with
the TNI, and assume that this will somehow result in reform. The
history of past engagement shows that such optimism is not
warranted.
Last week President Bush announced that Indonesia will be among
the recipients of a new Pentagon program, which will reportedly
provide up to $19 million for the TNI, to build foreign military
force capacity (section 1206 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2006). This amount dwarfs recent assistance
levels. In April, the commander of Kopassus, the TNI’s special
forces unit, participated in the Pentagon’s annual Pacific Area
Special Operation Conference (PASOC) in Hawaii. In March, the
Commander of the U.S. Pacific Command, Admiral William Fallon,
testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee about the TNI,
endorsed “a rapid, concerted infusion of assistance.” This statement
appears to accurately demonstrate the Administration’s current
approach of engagement with Indonesia’s armed forces.
The conditions the waiver overrode – pertaining to justice for
serious crimes, civilian control over the military, and respect for
human rights – have not been met (section 599F(a) of the FY06
Foreign Operations Appropriations Act). Not a single Indonesian
officer has been held to account for crimes against humanity in
Timor-Leste. While conditions in Aceh have improved, the situation
in West Papua has worsened; the province remains largely
inaccessible to international journalists, diplomats and
international human rights organizations. The Defense Ministry
remains overwhelmingly staffed by serving military officers, and
efforts to gain civilian control over the massive military business
empire (which provides off-the-books funding for the military) have
been half-hearted at best. The masterminds of the arsenic poisoning
of world-renowned Indonesian human rights lawyer Munir have not been
brought to justice.
While we strongly disagree with the Administration’s decision to
provide up to $19 million for the TNI, we feel that this
appropriation further invalidates any justification to comply with
the Administration’s $6.5 million request for FMF for Indonesia for
FY07, which itself represents more than a six-and-a-half fold
increase over the FY06 estimated expenditure.
Congress, time and again, has redirected Administration policies
when they have strayed from principles of democracy and protection
of human rights. The Administration must not be allowed to squander
the opportunity to push for security reform in Indonesia. We trust
that Congress will continue to be a strong advocate for an
Indonesian citizenry still repressed by its own military, and for
accountability for crimes committed by Indonesia in Timor-Leste.
Legislated restrictions on FMF and lethal defense exports, without a
national security waiver, represent the most important leverage the
U.S. Congress can exercise to influence positive change in Indonesia
and to encourage justice for the people of Timor-Leste.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Veena Siddharth, Asia Advocacy Director
Human Rights Watch
Karen
Orenstein, National Coordinator
East Timor and Indonesia Action Network
Rajyashri Waghray, Director, Education & Advocacy
Church World Service
Joe Volk, Executive Secretary
Friends Committee on National Legislation (Quakers)
Emily S.
Goldman, Senior Program Officer
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for
Human Rights
Adam Isacson, Director of Programs
Center for International Policy
John Oei,
Founder
Indonesian, Chinese and American Network
Eileen
B. Weiss & Sharon Silber, Co-Founders
Jews Against Genocide |
T. Kumar
Advocacy Director for Asia & Pacific
Amnesty International USA
Neil Hicks, Director of International Programs
Human Rights First
(Rev.) Jim Kofski, M.M., Asia/Pacific and Middle East Issues
Marynoll Office for Global Concerns
Sr. Sheila Kinsey,OSF, Coordinator
Justice, Peace & Integrity of Creation Office
Wheaton Franciscans
Marie
Lucey, OSF, LCWR Associate Director for Social Mission
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
Frida
Berrigan, Senior Research Associate
Arms Trade Resource Center, World Policy Institute
Dr. Gregory H. Stanton
President, Genocide Watch
Founder and Chairman of the Board,
International Campaign to End Genocide
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cc: Members of Foreign Operations, Export
Financing and Related Programs Subcommittee |
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See also:
U.S.-Indonesia Military Assistance page
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