Conspiracy theories in post-bomb Indonesia
Greg Fealy
In
the months following the 12 October 2002 Bali bombings, Indonesia was
awash with conspiracy theories regarding the identity of the
perpetrators and the methods used to blow up the two nightclubs. Most
of these theories attributed blame for the attacks to foreigners of one
sort or another. The most popular accounts claimed that the US
government masterminded the attacks and provided the necessary high
explosive materials and bomb-making expertise. A succession of media
polls in late October and November showed a majority of respondents
thought the US was behind the bombings and one Detikcom�survey
revealed 70 per cent blamed the CIA (see box). Other theories suggested
Mossad, MI-6 or one of Australia's intelligence agencies was involved,
and several asserted that the bombings were the work of foreign
al-Qaeda operatives.
With the
exception of a number of allegations that the Indonesian armed forces
or intelligence services might have been complicit, nearly all the
conspiracy theories downplayed or denied the involvement of
Indonesians, particularly in planning the attack and assembling the
bombs. It was argued that Indonesian extremist groups lacked both the
ability to organise such a sophisticated operation and the expertise to
put together bombs as powerful as that which destroyed the Sari Club.
Such theories remained popular even after the police arrested a string
of key suspects and began releasing detailed information regarding the
terrorist activities of Indonesia-based Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) members.
Conspiracism
This
preoccupation with conspiracy theories, often referred to as
conspiracism, is not unique to Indonesia. There is a substantial
scholarly literature recording the phenomenon at many points in history
and in many parts of the world. Conspiracism is especially common in
deprived, traumatised or repressed communities where reliable
information is scarce, intra-communal mistrust is high and the state is
given to arbitrary abuse of its citizens.
In
the Indonesian case, seldom has conspiracism been so pervasive as in
the aftermath of Bali bombings. This would seem to reflect a sense that
the world is now more hostile towards Indonesia and that Western
nations and foreign corporations are seeking to exploit the country's
economic and political problems for their own ends. Many Indonesians
cite the 1997 financial crisis and East Timor's independence as
evidence of the West's role in undermining national integrity. There is
also a widespread view that separatist movements in West Papua and
Maluku receive Western support.
Indonesian
conspiracy theorists therefore tended to see the attacks in Bali as a
continuation, if not culmination, of a broader US project of
domination. Many believe that the US carried out or sanctioned the
attacks in order to discredit and weaken Indonesia as well as reinforce
perceptions of Islam as a violent religion. The US could thus step up
pressure on the Megawati government to crack down on Islamists and
support the Bush administration's proposed war against Iraq.
Part
of the reason for the popularity of the conspiracy theories following
the Bali bombing was the extent of press coverage given to them.
Predictably, the more strident sections of the Islamist press such as Sabili, Media Dakwah and Jurnal Islam gave prominence to alleged international plots.
The case of Republika
Perhaps less expected was the role of Republika, the leading 'Islamic' daily, in promoting conspiracy theories about the Bali bombing. For the past decade, Republika
has claimed to represent the quality end of the Islamic press with high
standards of reporting, analysis and presentation. But in fact, of all
the major dailies, Republika's coverage was the most journalistically questionable and served to fan conspiracy theories relating to the bombing.
In late October and early November, a number of conspiracy theories were given prominence in Republika.
The first was that the Australian government may have played a role in
the bombing and was engaged in a cover-up. It reported that a 'key
eyewitness' to the Paddy's Bar bombing, Kadek Alit Margarini, had been
'forcibly' evacuated by Australian officials without the approval of
her family and Indonesian doctors and had died in an Australian
hospital on 19 October. She was cremated shortly afterwards, without
the family's permission and without an autopsy.
The
paper said various aspects of the Kadek case were suspicious. It
reported staff at Sanglah Hospital in Denpasar as saying that the
patient was stable prior to evacuation, but that Australian doctors had
insisted she be flown to Perth. A later story quoted an unnamed
Indonesian doctor as being shocked by news of her death, saying that
her condition had not been that serious. Furthermore, it quoted an
Indonesian forensic expert as asking why there had been no autopsy
prior to cremation. 'If the victim was cremated immediately, then the
question arises - what was there to hide?' (25 October and 15 November
2002). Although not stated explicitly, the articles insinuated that
Australian officials had irresponsibly expatriated Kadek, and possibly
played a hand in her demise, in order to prevent her from telling what
she had seen.
Republika also
reported that the corpses of four Australian soldiers had mysteriously
'disappeared' from the bombsite without ever being registered with the
Sanglah Hospital morgue. Furthermore, it reported that nurses handling
corpses had been told by the hospital not to discuss the issue. An
unnamed forensics expert said that the bodies may have disappeared
because they were 'important material evidence' or were 'closely
connected to the Bali bombing case'. The article went on to mention
that several US and Australian navy ships had docked in Balinese ports
in the months preceding the bombing. It said that one of the Australian
vessels, the 'logistics' ship Westralia, made an 'unofficial
visit' (12 November 2002). No direct connection was drawn between the
'missing corpses' and the naval visits, but the placement of the
stories seemed designed to suggest to the reader that the soldiers may
have entered Bali on one of the ships.
In its search for far-fetched accounts of the bombing, Republika�turned
up the Western Australia-based Joe Vialls, whom it generously described
as a �private investigator' and 'explosives and intelligence analyst'.
Vialls might be more accurately labelled an extreme right-wing
professional conspiracy theorist. His website (www.geocities.com/vialls/)
is filled with virulently anti-Semitic and anti-US views. For example,
he asserts that the Bali bombing, the Port Arthur massacre and the
death of Princess Diana were all sinister international plots and that
Australia had become a 'test bed' for the 'New World Order'.
Republika
quoted Vialls as saying that the Bali bomb had actually been a
micro-thermonuclear device, not conventional explosive as had been
asserted by the Indonesian and international investigators. (This
theory seems to have first appeared on the website of the conservative
US radio talk program, the Hal Turner Show in mid-October). He also
claimed that the Australian government had tried to cover up evidence
supporting this finding by deleting the eyewitness account of an army
captain on the Australian army's official website and had also ordered
raids against Indonesians suspected of JI involvement in order to
divert public attention away from the issue. He furthermore asserted
that the US, Israeli and Australian governments pressured the
investigators to blame Muslims for the bombing (10 and 13 November
2002). Vialls was reported as an expert commentator and no attempt was
made to test the plausibility of his theories.
Perhaps the most surreal theory carried in Republika
was that CIA, Mossad, MI-6 and Asio agents had descended on Bali before
and after the bombing because they had heard there was going to be
'war' between 'narcotics networks'. These agencies 'wanted to use (menumpangi
- lit., ride on) the war for their own objectives'. The rival
intelligence services were then said to have got involved in a 'battle'
which had left 20 Australian agents dead. The source for this story was
'intelligence sources' (12 November 2002). No supporting evidence was
presented in the article and there was no indication of any attempt to
corroborate the story.
At one level, Republika's
peddling of conspiracy theories regarding the Bali bombings represents
a lamentable failure to uphold journalistic standards, particularly in
a paper that aspires to be a journal of record. The most improbable of
explanations were routinely passed off as worthy of serious
consideration. Moreover, insinuation and implication took the place of
rigorous investigation and analysis. In effect, Republika alluded to sinister covert forces having responsibility for the Bali attacks and left the rest to its readers' imaginations.
Republika's
lapse in standards might easily be dismissed as nothing more than
journalists surrendering to their prejudices. But as scholars of
conspiracism have shown, conspiracy theories can have a profound impact
on public perceptions and actions. In particular� it can distort public
debate, inclining people to believe what is dubious or untrue. In
Indonesia, as in many other countries, conspiracy theories have in the
past fuelled community conflict, provoked mass protests and led to
ill-advised government decisions. The Bali bombings and subsequent
revelations about Indonesia-based terrorism raise important issues that
require informed and thoughtful responses. Republikaohas served its readers poorly by focussing on fanciful conspiracy theories rather than substantive reporting.
Dr Greg Fealy (greg.fealy@anu.edu.au)
is a research fellow and lecturer in Indonesian politics at The
Australian National University. He is currently teaching at the Johns
Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies in
Washington.
|