Why did we train an officer from the Kopassus Force?
Why did we train an officer from the notorious
Indonesian Kopassus force?
16 June
2012
The Indonesia Human Rights Committee was
shocked to learn that the New Zealand Defence Force hosted
a Kopassus officer, Major Edwin Sumanta at its six
month Staff and Command training course in 2011.
We have been a constant critic of military ties
to Indonesia, since these links were restored in 2007,
but the acceptance of a Kopassus officer onto an elite
New Zealand training programme marks a new low.
The Kopassus Special Forces have a long and bloody
record of involvement in human rights crimes and
repressing legitimate dissent. Kopassus officers have
never been held to account for their numerous documented
crimes in Jakarta, East Timor and Aceh In West
Papua.
A Kopassus operation was responsible for the
death of New Zealand journalist Gary Cunningham (and four
colleagues) at Balibo in East Timor in 1975.[2]
Does
the NZDF not know or do they not care about the ongoing
abuses perpetrated by a Kopassus officers against the
West Papuan people? In 2001 Kopassus officers killed
West Papuan leader Theys Eluay. International outrage
led to some low level officers receiving short sentences,
but the army chief of staff called the convicted men
‘heroes’.. In 2009 Human Rights Watch exposed the
Kopassus practice of detaining, beating and torturing
indigenous Papuans in Merauke apparently randomly and
certainly without any legal authority. And last year
leaked documents exposed a Kopassus spy network that
concentrates on tracking peaceful activists, politicians,
church and tribal leaders.
New Zealand training
sends an ‘all is forgiven’ signal to the Indonesian
authorities, but it is an insult to the countless
victims of Kopassus brutality. When will they know
justice?
ENDS