ETAN Protests Promotion of New Kopassus Commander
ETAN Protests Promotion of New Kopassus Commander
For Immediate Release
The East Timor and Indonesia
Action Network (ETAN) today said the promotion of Brigadier
General Pramono Edhie Wibowo to chief of Kopassus,
Indonesia’s notorious Special Forces unit, the latest
example of Indonesia’s failure to deal with its
military’s sordid past.
“The promotion of
Wibowo is yet another example of the failure of Indonesia to
deal with its military’s long and sordid history of human
rights violations in East Timor and elsewhere,” said John
M. Miller, National Coordinator of ETAN. “Instead of
promoting alleged rights violators, Indonesia should make
sure that senior military officials responsible for the past
rights crimes are brought to trial.”
Wibowo’s
appointment as head of Kopassus by his brother-in-law
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was announced earlier
this week.
In April, the U.S. government ruled Kopassus
off limits to U.S. military training. Late last year, ETAN
revealed U.S. plans to train Kopassus, which the group
called “the worst of the worst among Indonesia’s
security forces.” Several congressional offices also
protested. U.S. law prohibits the training of military units
with a history of involvement in human rights violations.
However, the provision has been long been interpreted as
narrowly as possible. This spring, the State Department
ruled that it applies to Kopassus as a whole.
In
1999, Wibowo headed Kopassus Group 5, which deployed to East
Timor in 1999 at the time of the UN-organized referendum on
independence. According to the “Masters of Terror,”
Group 5 “slipped into Dili on September 5, 1999, the day
before Bishop Belo’s house was attacked.”
The
Indonesian military’s campaign of terror surrounding the
1999 vote resulted in the murder of over 1,400 civilians,
the forcible displacement of hundreds of thousands, and the
destruction of 75 percent of East Timor’s infrastructure.
Kopassus Group 5 received U.S. training through the Joint
Combined Education and Training program in 1997.
Wibowo
replaces Major General Sunarko as Kopassus commander, who
will take over as military commander overseeing Aceh.
Sunarko was stationed in East Timor in 1996 and 1997 and
again in 1999, where he was Intelligence Assistant to the
Kopassus Commander.
Kopassus, founded in 1952,
played a key role in the crimes against humanity in East
Timor, which led the U.S. to suspend military assistance in
1999. The unit has been directly involved in training and
equipping militia’s in places like East Timor and West
Papua – where its soldiers murdered independence leader
Theys Eluay.
Formed in 1991, ETAN advocates for
democracy, justice and human rights for Timor-Leste and
Indonesia. For more information see ETAN's web site:
http://www.etan.org.
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