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Shadow Play by John McBeth (23 July 1998 Australia Review, reprinted from Green Left Weekly) Evidence suggests that the forces of racial hatred were deliberately
unleashed against Jakarta's ethnic Chinese during the May riots
as part of a power struggle at the top --GLW
JAKARTA - Down a narrow side street in a crowded East Jakarta
suburb is a small nondescript office marked by a white banner
with a red cross. Inside, Father Sandyawan Sumardi is playing
host to yet another group of people he simply calls "the
victims." They've been streaming into his office since May
14, when organized mobs in the capital went on a rampage of looting,
arson and rape that targeted Indonesia's tiny ethnic-Chinese community.
Shocked Indonesians are still struggling to understand the mayhem
that raged virtually unchecked for most of that day and continued
over the next two. Some think it was a spontaneous explosion caused
by long-smouldering resentment over economic disparity. But others
like Sandyawan believe the orgy of organized violence stemmed
from a conflict among key Indonesian power-holders that drew on
racial hatred. "This was not about ethnicity," says
the reed-thin Catholic priest softly, his eyes red-rimmed behind
his spectacles. "It was an intra-elite conflict that needed
victims."
Sandyawan, whose Jakarta Social Institute works in some of the
city's poorest neighbourhoods, is better placed than most to make
that judgment. Soon after the riots broke out, he dispatched
small volunteer teams across Jakarta to help people in trouble
and, just as importantly, to record what they saw. Those eyewitness
accounts, some from inside borrowed ambulances, have been catalogued
in a comprehensive report sent to the state-appointed National
Commission on Human Rights. One key observation: The violence
was premeditated and organized, not spontaneous.
The findings by Sandyawan's teams have put renewed pressure on
both the government and the military to not only explain the circumstances
behind the mid-May looting and rapes, but also to account for
earlier incidents of violence--the fatal shootings of four student
demonstrators at Jakarta's elite Trisakti University on May 12,
and the abduction and torture over the past year of more than
20 pro-democracy activists, 12 of whom are still missing.
Connecting up the dots has become everyone's preoccupation. "The
disappearances and the shootings are connected to the same group
in the armed forces, and the shooting and the riots are connected
in terms of cause and affect," notes Marzuki Darusman, deputy
chairman of the National Commission on Human Rights. He believes,
though, that others were also involved in the rioting.
A link has already been drawn between the abductions and the
military--remarkably
by the armed forces itself. An internal fact-finding mission
has concluded that Kopassus, Indonesia's special forces, was involved
in at least nine of the kidnappings (including those of five activists
still missing). Announcing the arrest of seven Kopassus officers,
the military indicated in a July 14 statement that what began
as an effort to root out radicals among pro-democracy activists
had gone badly astray. Although the military didn't immediately
release their names, sources close to the armed forces say one
of those arrested was Col. Charuwan, commander of Kopassus Group
4, the covert arm that works closely with military intelligence.
Charuwan is a loyalist of Lt.-Gen. Prabowo Subianto, son-in-law
of former President Suharto.
Certainly old practices take time to die. Those looking for improvements
in the quality of justice have criticized the way riot police
appear to have been used as convenient scapegoats for the Trisakti
shootings. And although Jakarta has finally conceded there were
organized groups behind the riots and the rapes, witnesses and
victims alike have been subjected to the same sort of harassment
that marked the Suharto years.
Marzuki says the instigators are sending women photographs of
their rapes as a warning to keep silent. Numbed by the testimony
he has heard and cross-checked himself, the former legislator
from the ruling Golkar party told the REVIEW: "This is the
first time we are describing a violation in Indonesia as a crime
against humanity--the codeword the United Nations used for ethnic
cleansing in Bosnia," where the majority Serbs sought to
systematically eliminate the Muslim minority.
Investigations into the incidents have been progressing slowly.
But with Kopassus being fingered for the disappearances, the
blame for almost everything that occurred during Suharto's final
days as president is likely to fall even harder on the head of
Prabowo. The latter headed Kopassus for two years before taking
over as commander of Kostrad, the Army Strategic Reserve, a post
from which he was sacked just days after Suharto's May 20 resignation.
He is now commandant of Bandung's Staff and Command School, a
low-profile position.
Gen. Wiranto, the armed-forces commander, has since been weeding
out Prabowo associates from the military's ranks, leaving insiders
wondering whether the other shoe has yet to drop. Among those
axed has been Maj.-Gen. Sjafrie Syamsuddin, Jakarta's regional
commander and a former Suharto bodyguard, who was transferred
to a position in charge of territorial affairs.
Whatever the truth of Prabowo's involvement, a consensus is emerging
both inside and outside the military that the Trisakti University
killings and the subsequent violence were deliberately staged
to show that Wiranto was incapable of maintaining law-and-order
while Suharto was on a state visit to Egypt. The Trisakti incident
may also have been designed to sabotage a reform dialogue Wiranto
had initiated with student activists.
Given the mystery surrounding the other events, the activist abductions
are perhaps the easiest to explain. Because of the circumstantial
evidence available to investigators, analysts believe the abductions
were aimed at cowing opposition to Suharto, timed as they were
between the general elections in May 1997 and the March 1998 session
of the People's Consultative Assembly that re-elected the former
president.
A source close to the military says that when investigators visited
Kopassus headquarters in Cijantung outside Jakarta, they found
a Group 4 detention centre--which may have been used to hold some
of the activists--had been levelled about a month earlier. According
to the source, now that the pressure is on, the military appears
resigned to cleaning up its own house. Now, it is trying to restore
a measure of confidence not only in itself, but in the way Indonesia
is viewed from abroad.
Prior to the military's announcement, the civilian Commission
for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence, known as Kontras,
had implicated four separate military commands in the abduction
conspiracy, an indication that the kidnappers were acting under
a central authority. Because it had been implicated in similar
acts in the past, suspicion has centred on Cijantung-based Kopassus
Group 4.
For Wiranto, the dilemma seems to be just how far up the chain
of command he should allocate blame. As the victims' relatives
clamour for accountability, the decision has become harder because
some of the missing might well be dead. Sources close to the
military say Wiranto might even decide to call a military honour
board if suspicion falls on an officer of general rank. One of
the last times such a board was convened was after the 1991 massacre
in Dili in East Timor. Maj.-Gen. Sintong Panjaitan, the regional
commander, was sacked over the incident even though he wasn't
present when troops opened fire on unarmed demonstrators.
Apportioning of blame for the fatal shootings at Trisakti has
been fuzzier. Although human-rights groups are convinced trained
snipers killed the four students, the blame so far has fallen
on 18 policemen, two of whom are already on trial for breaches
of procedure by losing control of their men and allowing them
to fire on unarmed students. No one, however, has been charged
with the deaths.
Human-rights lawyer Adnan Buyung Nasution, who represents the
two lieutenants, says the investigation was directed only at the
police right from the start. "There was never any intention
to get to the bottom of the case," says Buyung, who was allowed
to meet his clients only eight hours before the trial opened.
He adds that the military knows "it might endanger the unity
of the armed forces and could become very complicated politically."
Wiranto has denied these allegations and says investigators are
still looking for "additional facts" to determine the
involvement of other parties in the shootings.
So far, there's no physical evidence linking anyone to the crime.
All four dead were buried without an autopsy, a surprising omission
in itself. Two weeks later, one of the bodies was exhumed and
a bullet extracted. It came from a Steyr, an Austrian-made assault
rifle that police carried on May 12. But a high-ranking police
officer, who spoke to the REVIEW on condition of anonymity, says
the retrieved bullet still hasn't been matched to any of the weapons
collected at the scene. Nor has a second bullet found inside
a campus building. He says a third slug dug out of a wounded student
has disappeared.
The officer insists that the 18 police suspects, including 12
members of an elite anti-bomb squad, each carried three blank
rounds and 12 rubber bullets in their rifle magazines--but did
not have live ammunition. "This is a political decision,
not a judicial decision," he says. "They don't want
the army to be involved."
The students themselves were unaware live rounds were being fired.
The fatal shots appeared to have been aimed at the tail end of
the demonstration when almost everyone was back inside the campus.
All the victims were hit in the head or upper body, indicating
the presence of snipers firing from a nearby flyover or other
high vantage points. The students can't confirm police sightings
of 10 mystery men, carrying Steyrs and dressed in police uniforms,
jogging along the opposite end of the flyover soon after the shootings.
Local activists also suspect the military was behind the organized
rioting that occurred a few days later, simply because it's the
only group with the organizational muscle to pull it all off.
"It's difficult to believe that a government intelligence
network which has long been monitoring the movement of its citizens
is so impotent and unreliable that it couldn't protect all those
lives," says Sandyawan, the Catholic priest.
Some analysts suggest the deliberate targeting of ethnic-Chinese
properties and women was an exercise in ethnic cleansing that
spun out of control, leaving 1,200 people dead in burned-out malls
and supermarkets. President B.J. Habibie, human-rights and religious
leaders, almost everyone except the military itself, are now satisfied
that organized groups were responsible for much of the May 14
destruction, which began in Chinatown's Glodok district and spread
as far as the Chinese-owned Lippo Karawaci Mall, 25 kilometres
away. There, remote-camera tapes showed six truckloads of men
breaking into banks, cash dispensers and silversmiths--then inviting
in thousands of looters. Only hours beforehand, soldiers and
police guarding the mall had been ordered to withdraw. Who gave
the order to leave remains a mystery.
The story was the same in other places. Sandyawan's report lists
10 incidents where groups of 8-16 young men, some dressed in high-school
or college uniforms and others sporting short hair and military
boots, screamed anti-Chinese slogans as they led mobs in the looting
and arson. "They were professional groups who were well
prepared and had obviously planned everything beforehand,"
says Sandyawan, noting that witnesses saw some of the men carrying
radios and pistols.
At two department stores, men who emerged from cars carrying cans
of petrol started fires and ran upstairs with the looters. Hundreds
died. One of the worst death-tolls was in East Jakarta's Jatinegara
Plaza, where Sandyawan claims tear gas was fired into the ground
floor, as flames consumed the upper floors.
Equally horrific was the systematic violence perpetrated on ethnic
Chinese in the street and in their homes. Sandyawan's team has
recorded at least 180 rapes, some committed in front of terror-stricken
families. Many Indonesians have refused to believe the stories.
"What we're up against is a wall of scepticism, which shocks
us as much as the crimes themselves," says human-rights commissioner
Marzuki. "This should be a soul-searching time for Indonesians."
But so much is puzzling. Why didn't the army move more swiftly
to crush the riots, waiting instead until almost nightfall before
putting armoured vehicles and soldiers on the street? The authorities
have proffered no adequate explanation. A general recalls coming
across a well-dressed young Indonesian directing men armed with
crowbars to break into a shop in Central Jakarta's Sabang shopping
centre. "In hindsight," he says now, "I suppose
we should have arrested him."
There's also been no satisfactory explanation for why Wiranto
and the military leadership flew to East Java for a divisional
parade on the morning of the riots, even though trouble had already
erupted in the central business district the previous night.
They should have known there was a security vacuum in the capital:
Most police had been confined to barracks because of tensions
over the Trisakti killings, and some key Kostrad and police units
were in Medan, where they had been deployed to quell riots some
weeks earlier.
Lt.-Gen. Prabowo Subianto's responsibility for May's tragic events,
as well as his motives, are open to conjecture. One thing is
certain, though: he might well be facing his toughest test for
survival, even as Wiranto emerges stronger after weeks of careful
consolidation. Military sources say Prabowo's relationship with
the armed-forces chief is cold and may become frostier if investigations
are allowed to take their course. Says one experienced observer:
"If you listen very carefully, you can hear the sabres being
sharpened in the back room."
Prabowo's relations with his father-in-law and the Suharto family
are no better, even though he continues to live a stone's throw
from the Suharto residence. The day after Suharto resigned, he
told Prabowo during a face-to-face meeting that he considered
him a "troublemaker." The family, for its part, criticized
the young general for not ending the student occupation of parliament,
which became a powerful symbol of the reformist struggle around
the world.
Prabowo privately protests his innocence. His defence: the responsibility
for troop deployment in Jakarta rested with the regional commander,
in this case Sjafrie, a close friend. A Western military expert
agrees that for "operational purposes" this is indeed
so, but he says it still leaves company and battalion commanders
in a serious quandary. As he puts it: "If a three-star general
writes your proficiency report and he orders you to put troops
into a certain area, are you going to do it?"
_____________
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