Death Squad Leader Kills 1,000 & Dies
BANGKOK, Thailand -- One of Indonesia's worst death
squad leaders,
78-year-old Anwar Congo, has died decades
after executing at least
1,000 suspected communists and
others during a U.S.-backed purge which
killed more than
50,000 people during the 1960s.
Mr. Congo died in a hospital on October 25 of undisclosed causes.
As a young
man, he was hired as a deadly enforcer for a
newspaper
publisher and paramilitary gang boss in Medan
city, in the north of
Sumatra island.
In a 2012
documentary titled, "The Act of Killing," Mr. Congo
proudly
re-enacted his favorite execution method --
strangling victims with a
wire.
In the non-fiction film
by dual American and British citizen Joshua
Oppenheimer,
Mr. Congo enthusiastically described hanging,
strangling,
decapitating and driving automobiles over
victims.
Mr. Congo also acted as an execution victim and
let a wire be gently
laced around his neck to demonstrate
garroting.
He and other death squad members said they
believed torturing and
murdering suspects helped
Indonesia's U.S.-backed military defeat
communism.
In a
2014 interview with this reporter, Mr. Oppenheimer said
he
unsuccessfully petitioned Washington "for the CIA
(Central
Intelligence Agency) job documents pertaining to
Indonesia 1963-1966
to be declassified, and also for U.S.
Embassy defense attaché
documents to be
declassified.
"In the late '50s and early '60s, the U.S.
advised and funded the
Indonesian army's deployment like
an octopus with tentacles reaching
into each village.
This was done so that the army would be effective
in
exterminating the communists when the opportunity
arose."
Robert J. Martens, an American Embassy political
officer in
Indonesia's capital Jakarta from 1963-1966,
gave lists of suspects
totaling 5,000 names to
Indonesia's military.
"I, and I alone, decided to pass
those 'lists' to the non-communist
forces," Mr. Martens
wrote in a letter to The Washington Post in
1990,
attempting to limit blame after retiring in
Maryland.
The doomed individuals were described as
Indonesian Communist Party
(P.K.I.) members or suspected
sympathizers.
It was an "unmistakable signal from the U.S.
that the army should kill
all potential opponents of the
new regime," the filmmaker said.
Of the 5,000 names, "my understanding is that 100 percent were killed.
"They were
killed because they were potential enemies of the
emerging
Suharto dictatorship. The U.S., by providing the
lists, made it very
clear that we wanted these people
killed.
"Were they communists? Some of them, but many
would have been
journalists, intellectuals, artists,
trade unionists, leaders of the
ethnic Chinese community,
land reform advocates, loyalists to
President Sukarno,"
who was ousted in a coup when Gen. Suharto
gained
power.
"The U.S. wanted the army to go after any potential enemy of the regime."
In 1957, a CIA-supported
coup attempt failed against President
Sukarno, who was
perceived by Washington as soft on communism.
In 1965, a
bloodier strategy enabled U.S.-backed General Suharto
to
gain power from Sukarno and, in 1966, orchestrate more
massacres.
Meanwhile, the army and its civilian death
squads lost count of how
many people they killed.
"Of
course, nobody knows," said Marshall Green, the
American
ambassador to Indonesia during those
years.
"We merely judge it by whole villages that have
been depopulated," Mr.
Green told a secret Senate Foreign
Relations Committee according to
Tim Weiner's book,
"Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA."
When Mr.
Oppenheimer interviewed Mr. Martens, the filmmaker
also
interviewed Joseph Lazarsky who was CIA deputy chief
of station in
Jakarta in 1965.
"Notes from [my] phone
call with Lazarsky on 15 April 2004 shows he
confirmed
ticking the names off the list of those who were
confirmed
by T.N.I. -- the Indonesian army -- as killed,"
Mr. Oppenheimer said.
"The [Indonesian] army returned the
lists with the names of the dead
checked
off."
Britain's Economist magazine reported in its obituary of Mr. Congo:
"As America became enmeshed in the
Vietnam war, and the fear of
communism’s possible
domino effect across Asia took hold in the
West,
President Lyndon B. Johnson and his allies were
happy to look away as
more than a million alleged
communists were tortured and killed, many
of them Chinese
Indonesians.
"In the early days, he [Mr. Congo] beat his
victims to death. But
there was so much blood. Even after
it was cleaned up, it still stank.
To avoid the mess, he
switched to wire. With a wooden slat at either
end, it
was quick and clean.
"He is reckoned to have murdered at
least 1,000 people with his own
hands, and soon had his
own gang known as the Frog Squad.
"Aided by a fat sidekick
in drag with bright lipstick and lime eye
shadow, they
even re-enacted a beheading, and how afterwards they
ate
the victim’s liver," The Economist said.
"This
thin man with white hair is thought to have killed at
least
1,000 people, although some estimate his personal
death toll was even
higher," the British Broadcasting
Corp. reported.
"The Act of Killing" was horrific to film.
Mr. Congo and others "were boastful and open, and
would tell the most
horrible details of the killings,"
Mr. Oppenheimer warned an audience
at a
screening.
"When I started hearing the perpetrators speak
this way, I felt that
the big story, certainly the
overwhelming story, was the one right now
in front of me
-- impunity today. It was this feeling of wandering
into
Germany 40 years after the Holocaust, only to find the
Nazis
still in power."
***
Richard S. Ehrlich is a
Bangkok-based journalist from San Francisco,
California,
reporting news from Asia since 1978 and winner of
Columbia
University's Foreign Correspondent's Award. He
co-authored three
non-fiction books about Thailand,
including "'Hello My Big Big Honey!'
Love Letters to
Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing Interviews,"
"60
Stories of Royal Lineage," and "Chronicle of
Thailand: Headline News
Since 1946." Mr. Ehrlich also
contributed to the chapter "Ceremonies
and Regalia" in a
book published in English and Thai titled, "King
Bhumibol
Adulyadej, A Life's Work: Thailand's Monarchy
in
Perspective." Mr. Ehrlich's newest book, "Sheila
Carfenders, Doctor
Mask & President Akimbo" portrays a
22-year-old American female mental
patient who is
abducted to Asia by her abusive San
Francisco
psychiatrist.
His online sites are:
https://asia-correspondent.tumblr.com
https://flickr.com/photos/animists/albums
https://www.amazon.com/Hello-Big-Honey-Revealing-Interviews/dp/1717006418
https://www.amazon.com/Sheila-Carfenders-Doctor-President-Akimbo/dp/1973789353/
https://www.facebook.com/SheilaCarfenders