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U.S. links Indonesian troops to
deaths of two Americans
Jakarta -
Bush administration officials have determined that Indonesian soldiers
carried out a deadly ambush that killed two American teachers
returning from a picnic in a remote area of Indonesia last August,
senior administration officials say.
The conclusion, which follows a
preliminary investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, is
likely to muddy relations between Washington and Jakarta.
Indonesia is the world's most
populous Muslim nation, and the Bush administration has been trying to
persuade its president, Megawati Sukarnoputri, to take a more
aggressive stand against terrorism and to support Washington's policy
on Iraq.
Last month, in a reflection of the
administration's concern about the killings, President Bush secretly
dispatched an influential emissary to tell President Megawati that the
Indonesians must mount a serious investigation — with F.B.I.
participation. The official, Karen Brooks, is the National Security
Council's senior Asian specialist; she also has a deep personal and
professional relationship with President Megawati.
Indonesian leaders tend to bristle at
outside interference, and especially as the United States prepares for
a possible war with Iraq, which the vast majority of Indonesians
oppose. Even so, Ms. Brooks's mission seems to have been successful,
at least in part. Two F.B.I. agents arrived in Indonesia last week to
help in the investigation.
The Indonesian military has denied
any involvement in the ambush, which also killed an Indonesian teacher
and wounded eight Americans. But a report by the country's police
force last year suggested that the military was behind the killings.
The two F.B.I. agents now in
Indonesia are gathering evidence for the Justice Department in
Washington, American and other Western officials in the region said.
"There is no question there was
military involvement," said a senior administration official.
"There is no question it was premeditated."
The administration official and
diplomats from other countries said there was still a mystery about
who ordered the killings and why. They said the most likely
explanation was that soldiers were trying to send a message to the
teachers' employer, an American company that operates one of the
world's largest copper and gold mines in the area. The company,
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, had reduced payments and other
benefits to soldiers, the officials said.
"Extortion, pure and
simple," said a Western intelligence analyst, explaining what he
believed was behind the attack.
Freeport has declined to answer any
questions about the killings or about payments to the police and the
military.
"This is a police matter, and we
cannot comment on the ongoing investigation," said a company
spokesman, Siddharta Moersjid. "Freeport hopes the perpetrators,
whoever they are, will be brought to justice."
The victims, who taught at Freeport's
international school, were ambushed last Aug. 31, as they traveled a
twisting mountain road between two military posts near Tembagapura, a
mile-high company town on the equator in Irian Jaya, an eastern
province also known as Papua.
The party — the school's new
principal, his teachers and their families — had cut its Saturday
picnic short when fog and mist rolled in. At a bend in the road back
to town, with a steep gorge on the right and a small hill on the left,
several men sprayed the group's two Toyota Land Cruisers with
automatic weapons fire.
The Americans slain in the ambush
were the principal, Edwin Burgon, 71, a former smoke jumper in Idaho
who had taught around the world, and Ricky Lynn Spier, 44, a
fourth-grade teacher from Colorado. The school's Indonesian teacher,
Bambang Riwanto, was also killed.
Immediately, Indonesian and Freeport
officials blamed a separatist group, the Free Papua Movement, which
has been fighting a low-level guerrilla war for independence, or at
least more autonomy for Papuans, for several decades. Many Papuans
harbor deep animosity toward Freeport; along with some international
human rights groups, they say the company has destroyed sacred lands,
ravaged the environment and failed to share mineral wealth with local
communities.
Soon after the ambush, a team from
the American Embassy, including an F.B.I. agent from Singapore, went
to Irian Jaya to investigate; the F.B.I. also interviewed survivors,
who had been flown to a hospital in Australia.
Suspicion quickly turned away from
the separatists, though. In the course of that early investigation,
the Australian government gave the United States a telephone intercept
between Indonesian military commanders. The conversation, which took
place after the incident, leaves no doubt of military involvement in
the killings, said a Western official, but he added that it did not
implicate senior army commanders.
Indonesian police investigators also
exonerated the rebels. For one thing, the police report says, the
group "does not have the quantity of bullets" used in the
attack, and the organization "never kills white people." The
report, dated last Sept. 28, concluded that "there is a strong
possibility" that the killings were perpetrated by members of the
Indonesian Army.
But that was pretty much the end of
the police investigation.
"The police don't have any right
to investigate the army," said Brig. Gen. Raziman Tarigan, who
was deputy police chief in Irian Jaya until he was abruptly removed
this month and assigned to a desk job in Jakarta.
Still, the police report does raise
the possibility that money from Freeport may have been the motivation.
A soldier's pay is roughly $15 a month, the report says, adding that
soldiers have a "a high expectation" when they get assigned
to the Freeport area. But they had been disappointed by what they
received, and some "perks" had been reduced.
General Tarigan said Freeport
regularly gave policemen and soldiers money and other benefits, like
airline tickets to Jakarta. A general received a first- or
business-class ticket, while colonels and others received economy
tickets, he said. In addition, former Freeport employees said the
company had a $10,000 monthly "slush fund" for government
security personnel.
The Indonesian military receives less
than one-third of its budget from the government. To make up the
difference, it relies on its own business activities as well as
supplements from foreign businesses, especially natural-resource
companies.
Freeport had begun to reduce these
payments, on the advice of company lawyers who said they would have to
be disclosed under new American corporate-responsibility laws, Western
officials and people close to the company said. They also said the
military wanted a portion of payments — 1 percent of profits —
that Freeport makes for community projects, part of its effort to
improve local relations.
That pressure was apparently on the
increase: investigators say they have been told that, in the weeks
before the attack, Freeport had received threats of retaliation from
the military if more money was not forthcoming. -- New York Times
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