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Victims of the 1965-66 anti-communist mass murders are working to expose the truth. They face some determined opposition.
Stanley
The simple office sits
in a cheap housing estate in Tangerang, 20 km west of Jakarta. On a
tiny 250 square metre corner block, the house is not much to look at.
Sulami is 74 years old and often sick. She and her younger sister
rented this office in March 2000 to run the Research Institute for
Victims of the '65-'66 Killings (Yayasan Penelitian Korban Pembunuhan
65-66, YPKP).
They set up
the institute on 7 April 1999 to collect information on the mass
murders that claimed about two and a half million lives. Last March
they visited the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM). They
explained they wanted to work towards prosecuting those responsible for
gross human rights violations against Indonesian Communist Party (PKI)
members or alleged members in 1965-66. They were considering
prosecuting the Suharto government. However, Komnas HAM said they could
only offer limited support because rules restricting the movement of
people once labeled 'communist' were still in effect.
Supported
by several non-government organisations, the YPKP committee became the
first group to demand that a 1966 government decree banning the
teaching and spreading of communism-Marxism/ Leninism (known as Tap no.
XXV/MPRS/1966) be abolished. They first tried to meet with the speaker
of parliament, but failed.
Opposition
A
number of groups do not want the historical truth of the events around
the 1 October 1965 Incident (when General Suharto took control of
Jakarta and later of the country) exposed. An Islamic jihad group armed
with swords recently visited President Gus Dur in his palace and
expressed their anger because he wanted to abolish the 1966 decree on
human rights grounds.
Even
some leaders of Nahdlatul Ulama, Gus Dur's own religious organisation,
vented their anger at him when at a Friday prayer meeting he suddenly
declared he wanted to say sorry to the 1965 victims and their families.
Gus Dur confessed that many members of NU's own youth organisation
Banser had become militia members who took part in the massacres.
Muslim
political parties within the loose Central Axis coalition had already
begun to dislike Gus Dur's leadership when he showed a readiness to
accommodate minority groups and open diplomatic relations with Israel.
They seized on the proposal to abolish the 1966 anti-communist decree
as a reason for building opposition to Gus Dur. Law and Legislation
Minister Yusril Ihza Mahendra, who comes from the Crescent Star Party
PBB, even felt called to express his disapproval of his president's
idea openly at the party's congress in early April. He had to do this
to avoid being beaten in the race for party president by hardliners
such as Fadli Zon, Eggi Sudjana and Ahmad Sumargono. When Yusril vowed
to resign from cabinet if Gus Dur pushed ahead with his proposal to
abolish the decree, he was greeted with loud applause.
The
birth of YPKP and the unwonted appearance in public of several
prominent leftists who had once been political prisoners, combined with
the president's idea about the 1966 decree, made a lot of people fear
the rebirth of the communist party PKI. Some parliamentarians even said
the very survival of the state was at stake. Young people held some
well-organised demonstrations opposing Gus Dur's idea in big cities in
Sumatra, Java and Sulawesi. Some observers suspected that military
officers with a grudge against Gus Dur were behind the actions.
The
most amazing thing is that the strongest opposition to Gus Dur's
reconciliatory idea came from old nationalists like Ruslan Abdulgani,
who said it would provide an opportunity for the PKI to regroup. In
Sukarno's days, Ruslan was the spokesman for a political manifesto that
put forward the idea of combining nationalist, religious and communist
parties into a single front called Nasakom.
Sulami,
who was once secretary-general of the Indonesian Women's Movement
(Gerwani), doesn't feel too anxious about these political developments.
'I believe President Gus Dur will push ahead with reformasi.
Democratisation will go on. This will give millions of victims of the
1965 Incident a chance to discover the truth', she said.
To
this end Sulami and her colleagues, among them committee members
outside Jakarta and a French researcher, are busy building a database
of all the cruelties inflicted around the military-backed 1965
Incident. Despite a shortage of funds, YPKP is growing. Branches now
exist in several cities in Java, Bali, West Sumatra, and North, Central
and South Sulawesi. 'Of course many of our supporters are our own
compatriots. Most of them were on Buru Island', Sulami said.
Together
with the human rights group Solidaritas Nusa Bangsa (NSB) and ably
assisted by some young members of the People's Democratic Party PRD,
YPKP on 5-15 April held a training session on the techniques necessary
to investigate the 1965-66 killings. About a hundred people attended
it. Initially the exercise was to be held in a Catholic retreat centre,
but that failed when the proprietors found themselves being terrorised
by military intelligence and several people who said they belonged to
an Islamic group. These people threatened to burn down the place just
as had been done to the (Protestant) Doulos Complex in Cipayung, East
Jakarta, when they insisted on going ahead with hosting training for
former PKI members.
Hasan
Raid, former member of the High Command to Retool Revolutionary
Elements (Kotrar) and now an advisor to YPKP, said the appearance of
YPKP had stimulated anxiety among some people that their crimes against
humanity in the past would be exposed. 'People who talk about a PKI
revival are actually telling us more about their own fears that the
sins they committed against their fellow citizens under the protection
of the 1966 decree will be revealed', said this old man, who spent
thirteen years detained without trial in Nusakembangan jail and who is
now a grandfather.
Truth
YPKP
says its only interest in opening an investigation into the 1965 mass
killings is to discover the truth. 'If the PKI is proven wrong, let it
be wrong. I am only challenging the way punishment was meted out. It's
just the killings that we are making an issue of', Sulami explained.
YPKP intends to conduct an evaluation of its discoveries in December
2000. 'At that time we will decide if we have enough data to proceed to
prosecution or not. If not, we will go on collecting more information
that has been kept secret by the New Order powers all this time',
Sulami went on.
The
idea of setting up YPKP arose from a simple humanitarian impulse.
Between the Incident of 1 October 1965 and when the military arrested
her in early 1967, Sulami had moved around freely for a year and a
half. She heard a lot of stories about the military murdering civilians
they suspected of communism, and even saw some herself. After her
release she worked in the catering section of a detention centre. Bit
by bit she saved the money she earned for the purpose of conducting an
investigation into the murders. Her data gathering efforts became more
intensive when she was asked to accompany several foreign researchers
to some remote locations. She used these trips to add to her own data
set.
In
June 1998 a television crew came from Australia to make a documentary
on efforts to open a mass grave in Blora, East Java. Sulami became the
main source for the film. It was later broadcast simultaneously in
several countries on 30 September 1998. Among those who contacted her
with messages of support were the novelist Pramoedya Ananta Toer, Hasan
Raid, Kusalah Subagio Toer (Pramoedya's brother and formerly with
Lekra), Sumini Martono (widow, formerly with Gerwani), Dr Ribka
Tjiptaning and Haryo Sungkono. This eventually led to the establishment
of YPKP
Stanley is a journalist in Jakarta.
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