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Indonesia & East Timor Digest

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October 22, 2002

Jakarta Post - October 22, 2002

Yemris Fointuna, Kupang – Hundreds of East Timorese refugees sheltering in Kupang and Belu regencies have refused to be repatriated, pending the disbursement of Christmas bonuses promised by the Indonesian government.

October 21, 2002

Jakarta Post - October 21, 2002

Jakarta – About 1,000 street vendors were forcibly evicted from in and around the Pulo Gadung bus terminal in an operation involving around 2,200 officers from the East Jakarta public order agency, the police and the district military command on Sunday.

Jakarta Post - October 21, 2002

Nani Farida, Banda Aceh – A visiting director of the Geneva-based Henry Dunant Center (HDC), a mediator of peace talks between the Indonesian government and the secessionist Free Aceh Movement (GAM), criticized the government's decision to set a deadline for a dialog with the movement.

Melbourne Age - October 21, 2002

Jill Jolliffe, Balibo – The Victorian Government will establish a medical clinic in the East Timor house used by five Australian-based journalists whom Indonesian invaders killed.

The villagers of Balibo, where the journalists were killed in 1975, are enthusiastic about a State Government plan to build a memorial clinic there.

Institute for Human Rights Study and Advocacy - October 21, 2002

Results of Investigation into the attack on Freeport employees in Timika, Papua, finds corporation allows impunity of criminal acts by Indonesian armed forces

I. Introduction

Brief Historical Context of Papua, Indonesia and Freeport

October 20, 2002

Melbourne Age - October 20 2002

Matthew Moore, Jakarta and Brendan Nicholson – Indonesia was last night bracing for demonstrations after police detained the radical Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir for questioning over alleged terrorist acts, the nation's second decisive step against terrorism in less than 24 hours.

Straits Times - October 20, 2002

Robert Go, Jakarta – Jakarta is now armed with tougher anti-terror decrees, but the question remains whether it can aim and pull the trigger at the right targets as it tries to prevent a repeat of the tragedy in Bali.

Melbourne Age - October 20 2002

Lindsay Murdoch – For three months Omar al-Faruq refused to talk. But CIA interrogators at a US-held military base in the Afghan desert used sleep deprivation, isolation and other undisclosed techniques banned in the US to break the 37-year-old Muslim cleric they believed to be a key al Qaeda representative in South-East Asia.

October 19, 2002

People's Democratic Party Statement - October 19, 2002

On October 12, the world was shocked by the explosion at the Sari Club on Legian road in Kuta, Bali. It is appropriate that we feel great sorrow and condemn the bombing which killed almost 200 people. The perpetrators of the bombing must be arrested and tried as quickly as possible.

Australian Associated Press - October 19, 2002

Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri has signed two emergency decrees to combat terrorism following the devastating Bali bombing, Justice Minister Yusril Ihza Mahendra said today.

Xinhua News - October 19, 2002

Jakarta – The Indonesian government is planning to build a nuclear power plant by the year 2015 at the latest to meet the country's mounting power needs.

October 18, 2002

Jakarta Post - October 18, 2002

Moch. N. Kurniawan, Jakarta – Welcoming the agreement newly signed by law enforcers to combat mounting graft in the country, anticorruption activists called on Thursday for the establishment of a proper witness protection mechanism and of an independent commission to audit court decisions to support the fight against corruption.

Jakarta Post - October 18, 2002

Ibnu Mat Noor, Banda Aceh – Volunteers with the Indonesian Red Cross in Aceh have evacuated six casualties bearing gunshot wounds, including one state official, from four different locations in the strife-torn province, graphic evidence that violence is still rampant.

Federal Document Clearing House - October 18, 2002

[The following are excerpts pertaining to Indonesia by Deputy Secretary Of Defense Paul Wolfowitz to the Defense Forum Foundation meeting about the war on terrorism on October 18, 2002.]

Question: In light of the heinous bombings in Bali this past weekend, I'd like to ask you a question about Indonesia, a country you know very well.

October 17, 2002

Sydney Morning Herald - October 17, 2002

Hamish McDonald – Although the Foreign Minister, Alexander Downer, has dismissed the line of suspicion as "silly", some officials in his entourage must have wondered as they did the rounds of Indonesian military and police chiefs in Jakarta yesterday how clean were some of the hands they were shaking.

Radio Australia - October 17, 2002

Australia's defence minister Robert Hill has confirmed Australia is considering resuming military links with Indonesia's notorious Kopassus special forces.

Australia broke off all joint exercises with Kopassus in 1998, partly due to concerns about its support for militiamen operating in East Timor.

The Guardian - October 17 2002

John Aglionby, Kuta – Indonesia's most violent radical Islamist group, blamed for the deaths of thousands of Christians in eastern islands during four years of communal conflict, dissolved itself on Saturday, hours before the Bali bombings, it emerged yesterday.

Radio Australia - October 17, 2002

[One of Indonesia's largest and most militant militias, the Laskar Jihad, has been publicly disbanded in a surprise development which took place just hours before the Bali bombings. Analysts say the radical group had lost the backing of an influential body of islamic clerics.

People's Democratic Party Statement - October 17, 2002

The bombing in Legian, Bali, which killed 183 people and wounded hundreds of others has already impacted on a number of groups.

Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino - October 17, 2002

Radio Australia - October 17, 2002

[Despite claims that the Laskar Jihad, Indonesia's largest and most militant Islamic militia has disbanded, Christian leaders say the group is still active. Boat loads of militants have left the Malukus provincial capital Ambon, but local Christian leaders say over 1,000 Laskar Jihad members remain.

Agence France Presse - October 17, 2002

Jakarta – Indonesia's economic growth is expected to be shaved to as low as 3.1 per cent this year after the deadly terrorist bombing in Bali, analysts say, citing rising risk premium and falling consumer confidence.

October 16, 2002

Sydney Morning Herald - October 16, 2002

Mark Riley and Tom Allard – The Central Intelligence Agency issued an intelligence report listing Bali among possible targets of a pending terrorist attack just two weeks before the weekend's devastating Kuta bomb blast, the Washington Post is reporting.

Straits Times - October 16, 2002

Robert Go, Jakarta – Indonesia's most violent Muslim extremist group, Laskar Jihad, has been disbanded. The move comes in the face of the deadly blasts in Kuta which have clearly shifted public opinion against such terrorist groups and the ideologies they preach.

The Guardian - October 16, 2002

Kathy Marks, Bali – Sesca Rompas climbed on to a plastic stool and peered through a dirty window at her brother, Aldo Kansil, lying motionless on a bed below. He was a pitiful sight: two drips attached, arms swathed in bandages, his face an angry mosaic of burns.

Jakarta Post - October 16, 2002

Apriadi Gunawan, Jakarta – Two Acehnese who participated in a hunger strike for three days at the provincial legislature here were rushed to the hospital on Tuesday with digestive disorders.

Green Left Weekly - October 16, 2002

Max Lane – On October 5, Indonesian police arrested Ricky Tamba, secretary-general of the Popular Youth Movement (GPK), an urban poor youth organisation that acts in political solidarity with the Peoples Democratic Party (PRD).

Green Left Weekly - October 16, 2002

Sarah Stephen – The 168 East Timorese asylum seekers whose claims were rejected by the immigration department on September 25 are the first of almost 1700 asylum seekers who face the prospect of being forcibly returned to East Timor, despite many having lived in Australia for up to 10 years.

October 15, 2002

Jakarta Post - October 15, 2002

Medan – Dozens of Acehnese refugees living in temporary shelters in Medan, Deli Serdang, and Langkat, launched a hunger strike in front of the North Sumatra Legislative Council on Monday to demand the disbursement of Rp 100.5 billion in government funds.

Jakarta Post - October 15, 2002

Nani Farida and Kurniawan Hari, Banda Aceh/Jakarta – Acehnese figures welcomed on Monday a proposal to allow the separatist Free Aceh Movement (GAM) to participate in elections, saying it would bolster efforts for a peaceful and fair solution to problems in the province.

ASAP statement on the Bali bombings - October 15, 2002

ASAP condemns outright the barbaric bombing that took place in Bali on October 13 and that took the lives of at least 200 people from Bali, Indonesia, Australia and around the world. This was an act of mass murder carried out against defenceless people. ASAP extends its sympathy and solidarity to the families of all those killed and injured.

APSN - October 15, 2002

Max Lane – On October 14, in the Australian parliament Prime Minister John Howard seized on the terrorist incident in Bali last weekend to justify a further strengthening of repressive so-called anti-terrorist laws as well as of the security apparatus in Australia.

Jakarta Post - October 15, 2002

Ahmad Junaidi, Jakarta – Thousands of demonstrators representing entertainment centers in the city staged a rally in front of the City Council building and the City Hall on Monday, demanding that the administration allow them to remain open during the Ramadhan fasting month for Muslims in a few weeks.

Asia Times - October 15, 2002

Bill Guerin, Jakarta – For Indonesia the pretense is well and truly over.

Jakarta Post - October 15, 2002

Moch. N. Kurniawan, Jakarta – Military personnel in conflict areas have worked to escalate violence there in order to maintain their control over business activities, experts said on Monday.

They said military personnel in conflict areas were often involved in weapon smuggling, illegal logging, and car smuggling.

October 14, 2002

Laksamana.Net - October 14, 2002

It's hardly surprising that rabid Muslim clerics and shortsighted nationalist professors are blaming the US for the horrendous Bali nightclub bombing.

But something is seriously wrong when Indonesia's leading business newspaper also suggests that foreign countries might have masterminded the carnage as part of a covert plot to take over the nation's rich natural resources.

Jakarta Post - October 14, 2002

Multa Fidrus, Tangerang – It is no longer a secret that many police and military officers are involved in illicit businesses in many cities and towns across the country, and that would apparently include Tangerang.

Sydney Morning Herald - October 14, 2002

Greg Barton – The long hand of the military may have left its prints on the Kuta bomb. The shocking news from Bali probably couldn't get much worse. But the hard truth is, it just might. Most of the likely explanations for what happened point to systemic problems that are likely to escalate before they subside.

Sydney Morning Herald - October 14, 2002

Louise Williams – Radical Islam has long played a bit part on the fringes of Indonesia's murky domestic political scene. The crucial question raised by the Bali bombings is whether the same forces of Islamic extremism have now been recruited to play a similarly destructive role in the international arena; as terrorists.

Asian Times - October 14, 2002

Kafil Yamin, Jakarta – Before the full glare of television cameras this month, Indonesian army chief Gen Ryamizard Ryacudu walked toward a line of 20 soldiers and tore one-by-one the badges of rank from their uniforms.

Sydney Morning Herald - October 14, 2002

David Jenkins – In 1980, five Indonesian members of a so-called Komando Jihad (Holy War Command) hijacked a Garuda jet and forced it to fly to Bangkok. The plane was stormed by Indonesian commandos who killed four of the hijackers and the fifth man died in mysterious circumstances while being taken back to Jakarta.

Radio Australia - October 14, 2002

[Business leaders have called for immediate action from the President to prove her leadership saying they fear social revolution if the government fails to unite to act decisively. The country's economy will be seriously set back by the bombings – with the tourism industry the first and most obvious casualty.]

Papua Presidium Council Statement - October 14, 2002

Port Moresby - The Papua Council Presidium (PCP), on behalf of the people of West Papua, wishes to convey its sincere condolences and deepest sympathy to the families and relatives of the victims of the Saturday, 13th October 2002, terrorist bomb attacks at the tourist resorts in Kuta on the Indonesian island of Bali.

Jakarta Post - October 14, 2002

Jakarta – Golkar Party chairman Akbar Tandjung has been anticipating the worst in his appeal of the Central Jakarta District Court's verdict wherein he was sentenced to three years for corruption.

Jakarta Post - October 14, 2002

Kanis Dursin, Tamiang, East Aceh – It was only 7 a.m., but hundreds of students had already gathered on the Tamiang Islamic University campus, a two-hectare compound from where King Tengku Arifin ruled in the 19th century.

October 13, 2002

Straits Times - October 13, 2002

Banda Aceh – The deputy chairman of the ruling Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle's (PDI-P) Aceh chapter was killed after separatist rebels sprayed his car with bullets, military officials said.

Reuters - October 13, 2002

Dean Yates, Bali – Bombs ripped through a packed nightspot on Indonesia's traditionally tranquil tourist island of Bali overnight, killing at least 182 people, many of them foreigners.

Associated Press - October 13, 2002

Irwan Firdaus – A car bomb destroyed a crowded nightclub on the tourist island of Bali Saturday, sparking a devastating inferno that killed at least 182 people and wounded 300 – many of them foreigners. Officials said it was the worst terrorist act in Indonesia's history.

October 12, 2002

Straits Times - October 12, 2002

Robert Go, Jakarta – A top rival of President Megawati Sukarnoputri has gone on the offensive, criticising the leadership and calling for a new man in the driver's seat.

The attacks come at a time when surveys have shown declining popularity ratings for the government.

Jakarta Post - October 12, 2002

Moch. N. Kurniawan, Jakarta – The antiterrorism bill needs to provide a clear definition of a terrorist act, valid information to arrest terrorists and fair treatment of suspected terrorists, experts said on Friday.