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Added spice to Indonesia's terror
By Bill Guerin
JAKARTA - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is facing demands to step up
security in Indonesia's eastern island chain, the Malukus, or the "Spice
Islands" to romantics, amid concerns that a nationwide terror operation may be
in place.
Almost the whole of Indonesia's eastern region has been involved in ethnic and
religious violence, and sporadic bombings and armed attacks still occur in
Central Sulawesi, which lies to the west of the Malukus. Sectarian violence and
separatist movements are nothing new to these areas, where, according to an
International Crisis Group (ICG) report published last week, earlier conflicts
in Ambon and Poso have proven to be superb recruiting mechanisms for jihadi
organizations.
In one of the latest incidents on April 24 in the remote Mamasa district of
West Sulawesi, a new province partitioned off from South Sulawesi last
November, a deadly anti-Christian attack left six people dead and several
houses torched. Police now believe the incident may be linked to the Ambon
conflict and the bombing of the JW Marriott Hotel in Jakarta in August 2003.
Three Javanese suspects captured last week in Poso were said to be involved in
the Ambon violence and the Mamasa attack, though Central Sulawesi police chief
Sholeh Hidayat said he could not yet confirm their suspected link to the
Marriott bombing. Evidence collected at the scene of the arrest included
several videotapes about Osama bin Laden, five manuals on how to carry out a
jihad, several do-it-yourself manuals for homemade bombs, and a diary belonging
to Imam Samudra, the mastermind of the Bali bombings. Samudra has been
convicted and sentenced to death, but his accomplices - Malaysian nationals
Azahari Husin and Noordin Moh Top, both of whom are still at large - are
accused of plotting and taking part in the attack on the Marriott.
There are now fears that without a strong response from Jakarta, radical
Islamic groups could once again expose ethnic and religious fault lines by
exploiting an essentially local conflict in the Spice Islands and encouraging
further radicalism across provincial Indonesia, where hundreds of thousands
still live in extreme poverty.

A history of conflict
More than 6,000 people were killed,
and tens of thousands were forced to flee the Malukus before the signing of an
agreement in 2002 that resulted in a temporary peace between warring Muslim and
Christian parties on the Malukus' main island of Ambon. Some 87% of Indonesians
are said to be Muslim, but in the Malukus, about 1,700 kilometers from the
capital, Jakarta, the split between Muslims and Christians is more or less
even.
Both Yudhoyono and Vice President Jusuf Kalla, when chief security minister and
coordinating minister for people's welfare, respectively, under former
president Megawati Sukarnoputri, were instrumental in bringing about the
agreement, known as the 10-point bilateral Malino Accord, which was signed in
February 2002 between 35 Muslim and 35 Christian delegates. Despite the accord,
fighting between Christian and Muslim groups has continued.
To the west of the Malukus lies Sulawesi, the world's 11th largest island.
Sandwiched between the mainly Christian North Sulawesi and the predominantly
Muslim South Sulawesi is the remote and backward province of Central Sulawesi,
where some 2,000 Muslims and Christians were killed in fighting in the town of
Poso and in the capital, Palu, in 2000. Occasional bombings and attacks still
occur in the province.
As Indonesia attempts to tackle it's internal terror problems, supporters of
mending the 13-year rift between the US and the Indonesian military argue that
Indonesia needs support to become a principal ally in the global "war on
terror", whose targets include al-Qaeda-linked regional terrorism networks,
such as the Jemaah Islamiyah, or JI. Indonesian police have not been able to
penetrate the group. Despite recently convicting militant Muslim cleric Abu
Bakar Ba'asyir on charges of conspiracy in the October 2002 Bali bombing that
killed 202 people, the Jakarta court threw out the case against him of leading
JI due to lack of evidence (see
Indonesia's trial by terror, March 12).
The US declared JI a foreign terrorist group immediately after the Bali blasts,
naming Ba'asyir as its spiritual leader. But JI has not been banned in
Indonesia, despite Yudhoyono's stated commitment to declare it an illegal
organization should there be evidence to warrant this action.
Breeding grounds for radicals
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Kelty has pointed out the "almost
endless supply" of people in Indonesia willing to become terrorists. The same
point was made by the ICG in its lengthy report published last week,
"Decentralization and Conflict in Indonesia: The Mamasa Case".
A strong response from Jakarta is being urged. But tougher action to improve
security and law enforcement can only come at a price. During his term as
security minister Yudhoyono warned that Indonesians should be prepared to
accept drastic new limits on their civil rights. "The government will impose
restrictions as we are determined to prevent the deaths of more victims," he
said in August 2003. "Their lives are worth more than the price of human
rights."
In her state of the nation address in the same month, president Megawati
Sukarnoputri vowed to "dismantle the terrorist network to its roots". Four days
later a car bomb ripped through the Marriott Hotel, killing 12 people,
including the bomber.
Though few doubt Yudhoyono's commitment, it will take more than just political
will to overcome the security and intelligence challenges implicit in the tough
fight to combat domestic terrorism. The military, or TNI, needs to be brought
in. Since the separation of the National Police from the TNI in 1999,
engineered by then president Abdurrahman Wahid, internal security is supposedly
the exclusive province of the police.
Though doing its best to build an independent, intelligence capability backed
by the Australian Federal Police, it is no secret that the TNI keeps important
information about internal security threats close to its chest. The country's
shadowy intelligence apparatus is known for its reluctance to share
information.
Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Djoko Santoso said he would improve the
22 new territorial commands that have been set up across the country. The
presence of these military commands in provinces, military districts in
regencies and security networks in rural areas, has long been under fire, but a
campaign of attrition against an enemy who is here, there and everywhere all at
the same time will be facilitated by the network, with its command structures
all the way down to the local level.
The importance of resumed US military ties
Washington also believes that Indonesia remains a natural key recruiting ground
and safe haven for terrorists and their sympathizers. Yudhoyono, a former
general, is scheduled to fly to Washington and meet with US President George W
Bush later this month. Yet a hoped for revival of full military ties between
both countries may be farther away than has been generally assumed.
The US announced in February it would resume the International Military
Education and Training program (IMET) with Indonesia, and US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice said she was in the "final stages" of consultations with the
US Congress to allocate US$600,000 to $800,000 in IMET money to the country.
Her proposal, as part of the 2006 budget, is awaiting congressional approval
(see
US back in step with Indonesia, March 3). The IMET program
was suspended in 1991 due to concerns over the Indonesian military's
human-rights record and then completely halted in 1999. The IMET's program, of
which Yudhoyono himself is a graduate, includes counter-terrorism training.
The United States-Indonesia Society (USINDO), a Washington-based
non-governmental organization whose members include major US corporations with
businesses in Indonesia, such as Exxon-Mobil and Freeport-McMoRan Copper &
Gold, has also called for the lifting of restrictions on military ties.
But before agreeing to restore military ties, some elements in the US
administration and several senators want Jakarta to pursue justice by fully
investigating the August 2002 murders of two Americans near Timika at the
Freeport gold mine in Papua province. US investigators have accused the TNI of
blocking a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) probe into the deaths, but an
initial FBI investigation led to the indictment by a US grand jury of an
Indonesian civilian, Anthonius Wamang. He was described as a pro-independence
guerrilla, but separatist activists maintain he was a military informer.
Meanwhile, Admiral William J Fallon, commander of the US Pacific Command, said
on Friday he believed the resumption was going to be "much sooner than later",
citing Indonesia's progress in upholding human rights. "We both know there's a
legacy from the past of issues that were causing friction and were obstacles to
progress. I believe we're on the road to fixing many of these things."
A day later US Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick, used the same
terminology. "We would like to extend the efforts but we need to do so in the
context of what we do with some of these legacies," Zoellick said after meeting
with Yudhoyono last Saturday. (Indonesian marines and US Navy Seals took part
in a joint anti-terrorism exercise on Tuesday in the latest sign of increased
cooperation between the two militaries.)
Yet to many Indonesians, not just the extremists, the US has little
justification to condemn human-rights violations elsewhere after the bombing of
Afghanistan and the invasion of Iraq and subsequent events there.
A democratic ally
Proponents of the full resumption of military ties sooner rather than later,
among them Bush himself, argue that training and education under IMET could
boost Indonesia's capacity to fight terrorism and other transnational threats
and help expose Indonesian officers to US views, including human rights.
Indonesia is the world's fourth-largest populated country, with more than 238.5
million people, only slightly behind the US with 265 million. Its presidential
election last year was the biggest direct, one-day presidential election in
history. The July run-off between presidential candidates Yudhoyono and
Megawati generated 145 million votes, whereas American voters cast only 115.4
million votes in the George Bush/John Kerry election in November 2004.
This seems proof enough that Indonesia is now firmly in the ranks of large
democratic nations and has shown that Islam and democracy are compatible. The
enormous good will in Indonesia toward the US, generated by its support after
the tsunami and its continued long-term economic assistance, is a golden
opportunity for the superpower to continue the momentum and build a partnership
with Southeast Asia's biggest nation.
By all accounts both presidents are ready, willing and able to reach out to
this new dimension, but they need to be much more pragmatic about human-rights
violations by both sides in the recent past.
Bill Guerin, a Jakarta correspondent for Asia Times Online since 2000,
has worked in Indonesia for 19 years in journalism and editorial positions. He
has been published by the BBC on East Timor and specializes in
business/economic and political analysis in Indonesia.
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