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Oct - Dec 2003
The TNI wants more than just the defeat of GAM
Carmel Budiardjo
Since Megawati Sukarnoputri took over as President in
July 2001, replacing Abdurrahman Wahid who had tried
to push for reform of the military — ultimately, the
cause of his downfall — the Indonesian armed forces (Tentara
Nasional Indonesia, TNI) have succeeded in building a
common front with the country’s political elite, the
president herself and the parties represented in
parliament, the DPR (Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat, House of
Representatives). This common front centres around the
determination to preserve Indonesia’s territorial
integrity, the so-called Negara Kesatuan Republik
Indonesia (NKRI, Unitary State of the Republic of
Indonesia). Not surprisingly, there is a deep sense of
humiliation at the ‘loss’ of East Timor, felt
particularly keenly by the TNI, and a determination
not to ‘lose’ any more territory.
The top echelon in the armed forces, the TNI
commander-in-chief, General Endriartono Sutarto, and
the army’s chief-of-staff, General Ryacudu Ryamizard,
have frequently insisted that the NKRI project can
only be secured by giving the military a greater, and
indeed the decisive, role in fighting separatism.
These statements were soon followed by the publication
of a Defence White Paper, by the minister of defence,
Matori Abdul Djalil. This White Paper argues that
while Indonesia does not face any immediate threat of
a foreign invasion, it faces numerous
‘non-traditional’ threats ranging from terrorism,
communal conflicts, illegal logging and trafficking in
people to separatism. It argues further that as long
as such threats remain at a ‘low-intensity level’,
they can be handled by the police but the more Jerious
they become, the more incumbent it is on the TNI to
handle them.
The White Paper also argues for a reversal of a
much-mooted major reform project for the TNI, the
dismantling of the territorial command system. Instead
of dismantling the system, it will be retained.
Indeed, in the recent past, two new territorial
command structures have been established, in North
Maluku and Aceh, while others are likely to be
established when Papua is split up into three
provinces, a project close to the heart of the TNI.
Using the argument that underpinned the role of the
armed forces during the Suharto New Order era, that
the army is ‘the army of the people and must remain
close to the people’, the territorial command
structure ensures the army a presence at every
administrative level of society, from provincial down
to district, sub-district and village levels.
The Defence White Paper also emphasises the role of
the TNI in facing ‘the threat of armed separatism in
Aceh and Papua’. It laments the fact that these armed
struggles have intensified during the past decade and
have ‘even won sympathy and support for their causes
in other countries’. In the case of Aceh, while
welcoming the ‘cessation of hostilities accord’ (COHA)
signed in December 2002, it states unequivocally that
the Indonesian government will pursue that accord by
‘persuading GAM [Gerakan Aceh Merdeka, Free Aceh
Movement] to return to the fold of the motherland and
accepting the framework of NKRI’. This was one of the
demands that led to the final breakdown of talks
between Indonesia and GAM in Tokyo in the weekend of
17-18 May, leading to the declaration of Martial Law
in Aceh on 19 May.
With regard to Papua, the White Paper states that the
separatist Free Papua Organisation (Organisasi Papua
Merdeka, OPM) group is still active, and is using
‘propaganda, incitements, terror, robberies and
pressurising the population’, resulting in widespread
unrest and fear. While stating that it is the task of
the TNI to ‘overwhelm’ the OPM separatists so as to
preserve NKRI, this will be pursued in the first place
‘by persuading the separatists to re-unite with their
brothers in NKRI’. But should the response to this
approach not be positive, ‘the government will
consider using more effective methods’. Combating
separatism is clearly at the top of the TNI’s agenda
as it rolls back the process of reform.
While commentators were still absorbing the contents
of the Defence White Paper and working out their
responses, along came yet another move, the
publication of a draft bill on the TNI. Without
waiting for any discussion in parliament, the chairmen
of the two national legislative chambers, Akbar
Tanjung (recently sentenced to three years
imprisonment in a fraud case) who is still functioning
as chairman of the DPR, and Amien Rais, chairman of
the People’s Consultative Assembly (Majelis
Permusyawaratan Rakyat, MPR), announced their
endorsement of the bill.
The draft has provoked a storm of protest focused in
particular on Article 19 which grants the power to the
TNI commander to mobilise his forces in a situation
which he perceives to be an emergency, without
consulting the head of state. Some commentators
describe this as the loophole for a ‘legal coup’. By
granting to the TNI commander the authority to
establish defence policy and deploy national resources
in promotion of that policy, the authority of the
minister of defence has been overridden and the
principle of civilian control over the armed forces
has been removed. Moreover, Article 19 speaks about
the need to act to ‘prevent greater damage being
inflicted on the state’. The elucidation that
accompanies the Bill defines this as meaning ‘mass
unrest and other things’.
The Indonesian armed forces are now engaged in two
major military operations, in Aceh and Papua. In Aceh,
civil society which includes a whole range of
non-governmental organisations dealing with human
rights, the monitoring of atrocities and the
humaniüarian needs of the many thousands of internally
displaced people, are being forced to curb their
activities and activists are fleeing the province in
fear of their lives. Foreign journalists and aid
agencies have now been banned from operating in
war-torn Aceh, while Indonesian journalists have been
ordered to support the army’s line in all their
reports, to support the ‘national interest’ and to
display a sense of patriotism in everything they write
about Aceh.
Allegations in the Indonesian press that all the
persons killed so far are GAM members or sympathisers
have been challenged by activists who we have been
able to contact inside the province. They say that, as
in every previous phase of military brutality in Aceh,
the majority of victims are ordinary members of the
public. The TNI’s vicious little war against the
people of Aceh is daily reaching new heights and the
chances of monitoring the situation are being
strangulated by censorship and the gradual exclusion
of foreign observers.
In Papua, an incident in Wamena on 4 April when an
army ammunition dump was raided by alleged members of
the OPM has been used as the pretext to recall the
army’s elite corps, Kopassus, just recently ordered to
leave the province. Since then, units of Kopassus and
Kostrad, the army’s foremost combat forces, are
conducting continual operations ostensibly to find the
missing weapons. Dozens of people have been arrested,
one of whom died under torture while in police
custody. Sweepings of villages in the vicinity of
Wamena have so terrified the inhabitants that
thousands have fled into the forests, abandoning their
gardens and living without proper shelter. Already
there are reports of deaths due to lack of food and
exposure to the cold night air. The military has
meanwhile blocked attempts to conduct an investigation
into an incident last August in the vicinity of the
Freeport copper-and-gold mine when three teachers, one
Indonesian and two Americans, were shot dead. Initial
investigations by the Institute for Human Rights Study
and Advocacy (Lembaga Studi dan Advokasi Hak Asasi
Manusia, ELSHAM), Papua’s leading human rights
organisation, and the local police reached the
conclusion that Kopassus members were almost certainly
responsible for the murders. Their purpose is to send
a clear message to the mining company to continue to
use their services to ‘protect’ the mine, for which
the company pays handsomely.
Both these incidents have given the authorities the
potential to point the finger of accusation at the OPM
and, more importantly, to provide justification for
the TNI to bolster their presence in Papua on the
grounds of fighting separatism.
‘Fighting separatism’ has the unstinting support of
Indonesia’s political elite, from the president down,
who are giving the armed forces carte blanche to
conduct operations as they see fit. The policy poses a
grave threat not only to the people of Aceh and Papua
but also the Indonesian people as a whole who may one
day wake up to find themselves in the grip of a new
kind of military power, just as menacing as the
military power under which they suffered for more than
three decades during Suharto’s New Order.

Carmel Budiardjo (tapol@gn.apc.org) is with TAPOL, the
Indonesian Human Rights Campaign in the United Kingdom. |