Concern over human rights as US lifts Indonesia military ban

INDONESIA: Indonesia has welcomed the resumption of military relations with the US while human rights groups expressed concern…

INDONESIA: Indonesia has welcomed the resumption of military relations with the US while human rights groups expressed concern and said monitoring of the armed forces would need to be tightened.

The US restored military ties on Tuesday with the world's most populous Muslim nation as a reward for Jakarta's co-operation in the war on terrorism, US State Department officials said.

"We certainly warmly welcome this decision, whatever the reason is," Abdul Azis Manaf, a spokesman for the Indonesian Defence Ministry, said yesterday.

Washington cut back military ties after Indonesian troops shot at demonstrators in East Timor in 1991, killing dozens, when the tiny territory was ruled by Jakarta.

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Ties were severed after pro-Jakarta militias backed by elements in the military sacked East Timor in 1999 when the territory voted for independence. The UN estimates the militias killed around 1,000 Timorese.

Washington's move comes despite objections from rights groups who say Jakarta has done too little to reform the military and bring it under civilian control since the downfall of the military-backed regime of ex-autocrat Suharto in 1998.

Zamrotin Susilo, deputy chairman of Indonesia's National Human Rights Commission, expressed concern that weapons bought from the US could be used against civilians. "What is important is to be on guard against the experiences of the past, where weapons were used to violate human rights abuses," he said.

Ken Conboy, an expert on the Indonesian military, said the armed forces, known as TNI, would be pleased with the decision. He said because of financial constraints, Jakarta's generals would seek military aid for purchases and especially training.

"TNI has wanted this for a while. They wanted to escape their pariah status," he added. "There is a whole bunch of places you can go to buy hardware these days, but with the Cold War over people aren't giving friendship prices and Indonesia doesn't have the money for the high-ticket items that it once did."

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a former general, and the country's military chief, both received training in the US.

The US has also traditionally been a major supplier of arms and fighter aircraft to Indonesia.

US officials defended Washington's decision, saying Indonesia had made greater efforts to improve the country's democratic credentials and human rights record. - (Reuters, additional reporting by Saul Hudson in Washington)