Letter
to President of the United States opposing training for Kopassus
July
23, 2009
We the undersigned organizations
call upon the U.S. government to strictly prohibit any U.S. cooperation
with or assistance to the Indonesian Special Forces (Kopassus).
This force, more than any
other in the Indonesian military, stands accused by the Indonesian people
of some of the most egregious human rights violations. The annual human
rights report of the U.S. Department of State, the East Timor's (Timor-Leste)
truth commission (CAVR), United Nations human rights monitors, and the
full range of Indonesian and international human rights have reported in
detail the many crimes of Kopassus. Those responsible for these violations
continue to enjoy broad impunity for their actions, even in a democratizing
Indonesia.
The history of Kopassus human
rights violations, its criminality and its unaccountability before Indonesian
courts extends back decades and includes human rights and other crimes
in East Timor, Aceh, West Papua and elsewhere. In 1998, a program – organized
and led by then Kopassus commander (and recent vice- presidential candidate)
General Prabowo Subianto – kidnapped, tortured and killed pro-democracy
activists. Prabowo told reporters he is unrepentant over these crimes saying,
"we could say it was preventative detention." Other well-documented Kopassus
crimes include organizing anti-Chinese rioting in Jakarta in 1998 and the
1984 massacre at Tanjung Priok in Java.
Throughout 24 years of brutal
Indonesian occupation of East Timor, Kopassus personnel, tortured and killed
civilians in an attempt to intimidate and terrorize the population. Kopassus
personnel played a key role, including organizing militia proxies, in the
violence and destruction during 1999, the occupation's final year.
The crimes of Kopassus are
not only in the past. A recently published Human Rights Watch report details
ongoing Kopassus human right violations in West Papua. The report documents
how Kopassus soldiers "arrest Papuans without legal authority, and beat
and mistreat those they take back to their barracks."
Those who favor engagement
argue that U.S. training could lead to reform of Kopassus. This argument
is clearly refuted by history. For decades, the U.S. trained and gave other
assistance to Kopassus personnel, including General Prabowo and other leading
officers. This relationship had no ameliorative affect, rather, it provided
the equipment and skills used for repression.
U.S. law prohibits the training
of military units with a history of involvement in human rights violations.
This provision has been long been interpreted as narrowly as possible.
However, in 2008, the State Department ruled that the ban, known as the
Leahy law, applies to Kopassus as a whole. We believe that this ruling
should apply and the U.S. must continue to refuse to train Kopassus.
Sincerely,
John M. Miller, National
Coordinator
East Timor and Indonesia
Action Network
Signed
-
Mark C. Johnson, Ph.D., Executive
Director The Fellowship of Reconciliation
-
Dave Robinson, Executive Director
Pax Christi USA
-
Mubarak Awad, President Nonviolence
International
-
Jim Winkler, General Secretary
United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and Society
-
Kevin Martin, Executive Director
Peace Action and Peace Action Education Fund
-
Land is Life
-
SOA Watch
-
West Papua Advocacy Team
-
Marie Dennis, Director (Rev.)
James Kofski, M.M., Asia/Pacific and Middle East Issues Maryknoll Office
for Global Concerns
-
Mary Anne Mercer, DrPH, Deputy
Director Director of Timor-Leste Operations Health Alliance International
-
Marie Lucey, OSF, Associate
Director, Leadership Conference of Women Religious
-
Sharon Silber, Chair, U.S. Section
Society for Threatened Peoples
-
Carol Jahnkow, Executive Director
Peace Resource Center of San Diego
-
Rosemarie Pace, Director Pax
Christi Metro New York
-
Mary Beaudoin, Director Women
Against Military Madness
-
Eileen B. Weiss, Co-Founder
Jews Against Genocide
-
Ecumenical Peace Institute/CALC
-
Elaine Donovan Concerned Citizens
for Peace, Honeoye, NY
-
Jeffrey Ballinger, Executive
Director Press for Change
-
Diana Bohn Nicaragua Center
for Community Action (NICCA) Berkeley, CA
-
Bruce K. Gagnon, Coordinator
Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
-
Olympia Movement for Justice
and Peace Olympia, WA
-
Pace e Bene Nonviolence Service
Oakland, CA
-
Mary T. Whittlinger, Treasurer
GOMA (Ecumenical Moluccan Church).
-
Ben Manski, Executive Director
Liberty Tree
-
Blase Bonpane, Ph.D., Director
Office of the Americas
-
Pierre Labossiere, Haiti Action
Committee
-
David Swanson After Downing
Street
-
Joanne Landy and Thomas Harrison,
Co-Directors Campaign for Peace and Democracy New York City
-
Diane Farsetta, Coordinator
Madison (Wis.)-Ainaro (East Timor) Sister-City Alliance
-
Joan Kirby, UN Representative
Temple of Understanding
-
Rev. John Chamberlin, National
Coordinator East Timor Religious Outreach
-
Zelia Cordeiro and Felix Jones,
Executive Team Members VIVAT International
-
The Greater Boston United for
Justice with Peace Coalition
-
Michael Eisenscher, Coordinator
Bay Area Labor Committee for Peace & Justice (LC4PJ)
-
Mass Peace Action
-
Daniel LeBlanc, DPI/NGO Representative
at the UN Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate
-
Roger S. Clark Board of Trustees
International League for Human Rights.
-
Alan Muller, Executive Director
Green Delaware
-
WESPAC Foundation
-
Mariza Costa Cabral ETAN/Seattle
-
Bill Ramsey Human Rights Action
Service, St. Louis, MO
-
Peaceful Response Coalition
Portland, OR
-
East Timor Action Network/Portland
(OR)
-
Seattle International Human
Rights Coalition
-
John J. Witeck, Coordinator
Philippine Workers Support Committee Honolulu, Hawaii
-
Ben Gordon Pax Christi New Orleans
-
Jim Haber War Resisters League/West
-
Ellen E Barfield former national
Vice-President, co-founder Baltimore Phil Berrigan Memorial Chapter Veterans
for Peace
-
David McReynolds, former chair
War Resisters International
-
Leslie Cagan Former co-chair
United for Peace and Justice*
-
Sam Diener, Co-Editor Peacework
Magazine, AFSC*
-
Robert Hanson, Past Chair, Mt.
Diablo Peace and Justice Center* Walnut Creek, CA
-
Dr. Brad Simpson Asst. Professor
of History and International Affairs, Princeton University Director, Indonesia
and East Timor Documentation Project*
-
S. Eben Kirksey, Ph.D. Center
for Cultural Studies, University of California, WPAT
-
Peter Bohmer, faculty in economics
and political economy The Evergreen State College. Olympia, WA
* organization for identification
purposes only.
See also:
Indonesia
News Digest
News
services on Indonesia
Reports
& articles on Indonesia
ASIET
Publications & videos on Indonesia
Statements
& press releases on Indonesia
Indonesia
links
Indonesia
resources