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- Path: sparky!uunet!digex.com!digex.com!not-for-mail
- From: apakabar@access.digex.com (John A. MacDougall)
- Newsgroups: alt.activism
- Subject: Indonesian Army Strikes Church
- Date: 25 Jan 1993 13:09:44 -0500
- Organization: Express Access Online Communications, Greenbelt, MD USA
- Lines: 222
- Distribution: world
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- Forwarded by hrwatchnyc@igc.apc.org:
-
- Asia Watch press release
-
- January 25, 1993
- Vol.5, No.3
-
- INDONESIA: MILITARY REPRESSION AGAINST THE BATAK CHURCH
-
- Summary
-
- In late November 1992, a long-simmering conflict broke out in the open over
- the leadership of the Batak Protestant Christian Congregation (Huria Kristen
- Batak Protestan or HKBP) in north Sumatra. The head of the congregation is
- known as ephorus, roughly equivalent to "archbishop." In December, the North
- Sumatra branch of Indonesia's internal security agency, BAKORSTANASDA,
- intervened on one side of the conflict and issued a decree appointing its own
- choice for ephorus, a man who was a convicted embezzler. In the uproar and
- protests that followed, dozens of church members were arbitrarily detained,
- houses were searched without warrants, and press coverage of the situation
- was banned. As of January 18, 1993, some sixty people were believed to be
- in detention. Asia Watch called on the Indonesian government to release all
- those arbitrarily detained, to lift restrictions on freedom of expression
- and to allow members of HKBP full freedom of association to choose their
- leadership without government interference.
-
- Background to Intervention
-
- The Toba clan of the Batak ethnic group in north Sumatra is largely
- Protestant, and the church is organized into a congregation, the HKBP, of
- some two million members, headed by an ephorus and a governing Central
- Council. The ephorus is elected for a six-year term. Between November 23
- and 28, 1992, the HKBP, which has a history of social activism, convened its
- 51st Synod in Sipoholon, Tarutung, North Sumatra, at which the election of
- an ephorus was to take place. Rev. Dr. S.A.E. Nababan, the current ephorus
- elected in 1986, was being challenged by a faction within the HKBP close
- to the army. That faction was headed by the Secretary-General of the HKBP,
- one Rev. Simorangkir.
-
- The synod was marked by demonstrations and disruptions. On the final
- night of the synod, November 28, at about 10 p.m., the session was in
- disarray, with Simorangkir's faction noisily claiming that Nababan was trying
- to block discussion of three items. There had been no election. Nababan
- suspended proceedings as an ephorus is authorized to do under HKBP's rules
- of governance; an army officer, Lt. Col. Paris Ginting, then appeared and
- ordered Nababan to leave the room.
-
- After his departure, a rump session of the Central Council was held
- with Ginting; Colonel Daniel Toding, the regional military commander
- (DANREM 023); and Simorangkir, among others. Participants at the meeting
- told the press that the main subject of discussion was the security problems
- caused by the fractious synod.
-
- Later on, in the early hours of November 29, Simorangkir, claiming
- a mandate from the Central Council, called a general meeting of the synod,
- without the knowledge of Nababan, and read out a typed statement. Purporting
- to be the decision of the meeting the night before, it announced the
- formation of a caretaker council with Simorangkir himself as acting
- ephorus, on the utterly false grounds that Nababan had resigned for
- health reasons. Participants in that meeting, however, said no such
- decision had been reached or even discussed, and suggested the statement
- must have been prepared long in advance. Members of the synod rejected
- Simorangkir's coup attempt and overwhelmingly voted to retain Nababan.
- Simorangkir then claimed that the HKBP had turned the leadership question
- over to the Indonesian government to resolve. Neither Simorangkir nor HKBP,
- however, had any authority to act without the agreement of the ephorus,
- i.e. Nababan.
-
- As the meeting degenerated into a mass protest largely directed
- against Simorangkir, Colonel Toding, who was present throughout, ordered
- his men to arrest unruly members. He also, however, cancelled Simorangkir's
- "decision" to make himself acting ephorus and the meeting broke up.
-
- The December 23 Decree
-
- Over the following weeks, tension remained high, and the HKBP
- headquarters in the village of Pearaja, Tarutung, was surrounded by the
- military. On December 23, Major General R. Pramono, the regional commander
- of BAKORSTANASDA, who is also the regional military commander, issued a
- decree appointing a member of the Simorangkir faction, Dr. S.M. Siahaan,
- as acting ephorus, effective December 31. Siahaan, former dean of the
- education faculty of the respected Nommensen University in North Sumatra,
- had been convicted of corruption in 1976 for embezzling university funds
- and sentenced to six months in prison; he was also accused of taking funds
- from HKBP's Education Foundation in Pematangsiantar, North Sumatra.
-
- The BAKORSTANASDA decree (appendix 1) claimed the intervention was
- necessary on national security grounds given the upcoming session in March
- 1993 of the People's Consultative Assembly which is expected to re-elect
- President Suharto. It cited two other decrees giving the government
- responsibility to settle the HKBP dispute. One was a BAKORSTANASDA decree
- dated February 27, 1991; the second was a Ministry of Religious Affairs
- decree dated October 21, 1992, meaning the military had decided to intervene
- long before the synod was ever convened. The December 23, 1992 decree also
- cited a report from the military commander, Colonel Toding, on the failure
- of the synod to elect a new ephorus, and a report by the Committee of the
- 51st Synod about matters the synod was unable to resolve. The latter report
- was prepared by Simorangkir. The decree also called for a special synod to
- be convened, in cooperation with BAKORSTANASDA, no later than mid-February
- 1993 to elect new officials for HKBP.
-
- Outrage over the BAKORSTANASDA intervention was widespread and
- instantaneous. HKBP filed a law suit against the regional military
- commander and BAKORSTANASDA head, General Pramono. (On January 11, the
- court ruled in favor of HKBP.) Some 4,000 HKBP members marched to the
- provincial parliament in Medan on December 28, demanding the decree be
- revoked. Others gathered at the governor's mansion, and still others
- marched to the regional military headquarters. Security forces lined
- their route. A major Jakarta newspaper, Suara Pembaruan, wondered aloud
- whether BAKORSTANASDA had not gone too far and said the action constituted
- unacceptable interference in the internal affairs of the church.
-
- Curiously, the Interior Minister, General Rudini, and a senior
- minister close to President Suharto, Admiral Sudomo, the Coordinating
- Minister for Political Affairs and Security, publicly opposed the
- BAKORSTANASDA action, both claiming that they joined with church
- leaders in supporting Rev. Nababan. They thus stood in direct opposition
- to Commander of the Armed Forces, General Try Sutrisno, who backed
- General Pramono.
-
- On December 31, the day that Dr. Siahaan was to be inaugurated,
- thousands of HKBP members occupied the church at HKBP headquarters in
- Pearaja to prevent the ceremony from taking place. There were also
- demonstrations in Jakarta. The occupation of the church, as well as other
- protests throughout the Toba Batak area of North Sumatra, continued for
- the next two weeks.
-
- Military Action Against HKBP
-
- On January 9, the Indonesian government issued a decree banning
- all individuals and organizations from commenting on the HKBP crisis. By
- the terms of the decree, only Sudomo, the Coordinating Minister for Political
- Affairs and Security, and General Pramono, the regional military commander,
- had the authority to make public statements on the issue. By this time,
- Sudomo had clearly changed his stance, telling the press that the
- BAKORSTANASDA move against HKBP was "justified and not an act of
- interference."
-
- This clear violation of freedom of expression proved to be the prelude
- to a military crackdown which began on January 15, 1993. Eight church members
- staying in thehome of Rev. J.A.U. Dolakseribu were seized by the army and
- taken to an undisclosed location. Rev. Daulat Sitorus, another minister who
- went to look for the eight was also seized. The house of the chief judge
- of the North Sumatra High Court, Judge Lintong Oloan Siahaan, who agreed
- to hear the HKBP law suit, was reportedly stoned and vandalized.
-
- On January 16, at about 7 a.m., some 100 troops consisting of
- soldiers from the Bukit Barisan command, police, and military police,
- charged the occupied church, injuring at least three ministers and one
- lay person in the process. Two hours later, Rev. Nelson Siregar, the
- director of HKBP's community development program, and Rev. W.T. Simarmata,
- director of its education department, were summoned by the local military
- commander. They were later arrested and transported 300 km to the provincial
- capital, Medan, where they were held in the military headquarters, Gaperta.
- Thirty-six students were also detained, all but 10 of whom were released
- the next day.
-
- On Sunday, January 17, a human rights lawyer, Laudin Napitupulu, from
- the Legal Aid Foundation's Medan office, was detained together with a HKBP
- minister, Rev. Togar Hasugian, and seven students and lay members. All were
- arrested at the house of a minister in the village of Aek Siancimun by police
- from the North Tapanuli command (POLRES). On the same day, about 30 police
- officers arrived at the house of Rev. Nababan, the HKBP ephorus, where many
- protestors had gathered. About 25 people, mostly students, were taken away
- in military vehicles.
-
- On Monday, January 18, the head of HKBP's youth program, Rev. J.A.U.
- Dolakseribu (whose house had been stormed by police three days earlier) was
- arrested after performing a wedding service at the HKBP church on Jalan
- Sudirman, Medan.
-
- As of January 18, some 60 HKBP members, including 43 students, were
- believed under arrest. Those detained in Gaperta, Medan were denied visits
- from their families, in violation of Indonesia's own Criminal Procedure Code.
-
- Conclusions and Recommendations
-
- The action against HKBP is taking place against the backdrop of
- heightened security measures more generally as the "election" of President
- Suharto approaches in March and of a fears of increased religious
- polarization between Indonesia's tiny Christian minority and the
- Muslim majority. A spate of attacks on Christian churches took place
- in November 1992 by Muslim groups fearful of "Christianization."
-
- But tensions within the Batak church have been going on for years
- and have little to do with recent political developments. There is no
- justification for the action taken by BAKORSTANASDA against the church
- leadership. Asia Watch calls on the Indonesian government to release
- immediately and unconditionally all those arbitrarily arrested for
- peaceful protest in connection with the protests over BAKORSTANASDA
- intervention in HKBP's affairs, including Rev. Dolakseribu, Sakti
- Pakpahan, Hendrik Siagian, Rev. WTP Simarmata, Dr. Tumpak Tobing,
- and Haposan Tobing. It notes the action taken by BAKORSTANASDA
- to appoint an ephorus against the wishes of the congregation was in
- violation of the internationally-recognized right to freedom of
- religion and association. The arrest of peaceful protestors was a
- violation of their right to freedom of expression. Finally, Asia
- Watch calls for disciplinary action to be taken against Major
- General Pramono, the man responsible for the human rights abuses cited
- in this statement. General Pramono was also responsible for atrocities
- committed during the counterinsurgency campaign in Aceh in 1990-91.
-
- ****
-
- For More Information
-
- Sidney Jones (212) 972-8400
- (718) 398-4186
-
- Email: hrwatchnyc@igc.apc.org
-
- Asia Watch is an independent organization created in 1985 to monitor and
- promote internationally recognized human rights in Asia. The Chair is Jack
- Greenberg, the Vice Chairs are Harriet Rabb and Orville Schell, and the
- Executive Director is Sidney Jones.
-
- Asia Watch is a division Human Rights Watch, which also includes Africa
- Watch, Americas Watch, Helsinki Watch and Middle East Watch. The Chair
- of Human Rights Watch is Robert L. Bernstein and the Vice Chair is Adrian
- DeWind. Aryeh Neier is Executive Director; Kenneth Roth, Deputy Director;
- Holly Burkhalter, Washington Director; Susan Osnos, Press Director.
-