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AM: Recognise Indonesia's Heart Of Darkness

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  • AM: Recognise Indonesia's Heart Of Darkness

    RECOGNISE INDONESIA'S HEART OF DARKNESS
    Mark Aarons

    The Australian
    July 15, 2008 Tuesday
    1 - All-round Country Edition

    Just as much of the Left needs to revisit its support for murderous
    communist regimes, we should also reconsider political support of
    Suharto and the military, contends Mark Aarons

    WHEN Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Jose Ramos Horta receive the Truth
    and Friendship Commission's (CTF) report today, the Indonesian
    President will be hoping that it is the final chapter in this
    long-running and tragic saga.

    Established in 2005 as a joint Indonesian-East Timorese inquiry,
    the commission has investigated the campaign of violence that marred
    Timor's 1999 independence vote. Leaked copies of its report confirm
    the findings of Timor's Reception, Truth and Reconciliation Commission
    (CAVR) that the campaign of terror, murder and forced deportations was
    directed, funded and carried out under the command of the Indonesian
    government and military, a fact widely known at the time.

    The report's release coincides with the start of the lengthy
    campaign that will culminate in next April's Indonesian election. The
    President's party is behind in the polls and there is speculation that
    former Indonesian armed forces commander Wiranto could emerge as a
    serious contender for president. This would be ironic, as the 1999
    campaign of destruction was carried out on Wiranto's orders, which
    he denied under Koranic oath when he voluntarily appeared before the
    CTF in May 2007.

    Wiranto's denial is symptomatic of the attitude adopted by the Javanese
    military elite, which still dominates Indonesian life. Behind the 1999
    events stands a series of crimes carried out by the armed forces that
    have run the country since 1965. The CAVR report detailed the horrors
    inflicted on Timor between 1975 and 1999, in which almost 200,000
    people were killed or starved to death and the survivors rounded up
    and forcibly resettled in what were, in effect, concentration camps,
    where many were tortured.

    In 1969, the army rigged the Act of Free Choice to ensure West Papua
    was incorporated into Indonesia.

    In the preceding seven years the indigenous population was subjected
    to a regime of terror and murder to prepare for the vote, which was
    recognised by the international community despite widespread knowledge
    of the methods that had been used to secure the rorted result. The
    massacre of 500,000 to one million alleged communists in 1965-66 set
    the tone for military rule, followed by the establishment of a brutal
    police state replete with gulags full of political prisoners.

    Reminiscent of Turkey's continuing denial of responsibility for the
    Armenian genocide during and after World War I, Indonesia refuses to
    confront this decades-long history of criminal behaviour by its army
    leaders. Indeed, the families of those slaughtered in the mid-1960s
    still cannot disinter their bodies for dignified reburial. Such denial
    infects Indonesian society and, while it persists, gravely restricts
    the country's ability to develop its institutions in a democratic
    and tolerant way.

    It also infects Australian attitudes to Indonesia and skews our
    policies towards our most important neighbour. Successive Australian
    governments embraced the New Order ushered in by general (later
    president) Suharto's massacres as a welcome development. There are
    also indications of Australian assistance in these bloody events.

    This condoning of mass murder was recently brought into sharp relief
    by former prime minister Paul Keating, who launched a blistering
    attack on his robust critic, Paddy McGuinness, at the time of his
    death, but travelled to Jakarta to praise the mass murderer Suharto
    at his funeral.

    Keating's warmth for Suharto echoes another prime minister, Harold
    Holt, who in 1966 cheerfully welcomed the ostensible reorientation
    of Indonesian politics that had been brought about by "knocking off"
    up to one million people.

    In between, there has been an unedifying array of prime ministers who
    have explicitly or inferentially condoned the criminal policies of
    the Indonesian military. John Gorton and William McMahon continued
    Holt's approach, while Gough Whitlam initiated "batik diplomacy",
    welcoming Suharto to Australia and encouraging Timor's incorporation
    into Indonesia.

    Malcolm Fraser remained silent about the deaths of 180,000 Timorese
    between 1975 and 1982, although Australian intelligence knew the
    terrible details. Bob Hawke changed ALP policy to reaffirm Australia's
    formal recognition of Indonesian sovereignty over Timor, then approved
    the notorious Timor Gap Treaty. Keating made a secret deal with Suharto
    that included upgrading military ties. In 1998, John Howard initiated
    the process leading to East Timor's independence vote, but failed to
    act against Indonesian-controlled violence until forced to do so by
    the worst atrocities that followed the August 1999 vote.

    During the past 40 years, such policies have been supported by
    influential Australians. James McAuley and Heinz Arndt greeted the
    Suharto regime with enthusiasm in journals such as Quadrant and
    Australian Outlook; reporting for the Australian Financial Review,
    McGuinness took an Indonesian helicopter trip around Timor at the
    height of the military-induced famine and declared it did not exist;
    Paul Kelly has written in support of international recognition of
    Jakarta's control of West Papua in this newspaper; in his weekly
    newspaper column, Gerard Henderson has minimised the role of the
    Indonesian military in organising, financing and directing the 1999
    crimes in Timor, despite evidence to the contrary.

    Just as Indonesia cannot move forward without coming to terms with
    the dark side of its recent history, so too Australia cannot build
    a secure and lasting relationship with its most important neighbour
    without being honest about our quiescence towards -- and sometimes
    active support for -- the crimes of the Indonesian military.

    Just as sections of the Left need to re-evaluate their support for
    murderous communist regimes, it is time to reconsider the equally
    immoral support given to Suharto and his cohort. The CTF report is
    a good starting point. Continuing criminal behaviour in West Papua
    makes this even more relevant.

    There were alternatives to Australia's obsequious policies in the
    past. By taking a stronger stand on human rights abuses in West Papua
    and revisiting the rorted 1969 plebiscite, we would avoid once again
    dragging our national honour through the mud.
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