By Lauren Gumbs
Relations might be tense between Jakarta and Canberra, but
between Canberra and the Indonesian military, things have never been better.
Indonesian officials are in
disbelief that special life rafts carrying undocumented migrants were given
by Australian authorities for the purpose of sending back migrants but concede
that there might be a special agreement between Australian and Indonesian
defence force chiefs.
Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa remains steadfast in
opposing the Coalition’s boat turn arounds despite six reported incidents where
asylum seekers have been pushed back or sent back on new lifeboats purchased
solely for that task.
And President Yudhoyono, deeply concerned about impositions
on sovereignty as well as public ire, is still smarting after the phone tapping
furore and recent accidental maritime incursions.
The Indonesian military (TNI) however, previously told to
beef up maritime border protection and point their radar Australia’s way, have
been largely silent on rhetoric about threats to Indonesia’s sovereignty from
Australia and somehow missed two giant orange life rafts being chaperoned
around the sea for several days before finally being nudged back toward
Indonesia.
Last week after a lifeboat filled with asylum seekers landed
on popular Pangandaran beach in West Java, Indonesian media reported the tongue
in cheek comments of National Army Commander Moeldoko on the police
investigation into the occurrence; an event that TNI and perhaps even the
Indonesian Police (Polri)- whose job it is to catch the people smugglers- was
almost certainly well aware of and well informed about.
Berita
Satu reported that a sophisticated life raft suspected to have been given
by Australian authorities had landed on Pangandaran beach with dozens of illegal
immigrants inside and the case was being looked into by police.
But Moeldoko refused to give anything away.
“So strange, it’s not like the boat could have just fallen
out of the sky. It’s now being investigated by the police,” he said.
According to Prime Minister Tony Abbot, the “way to
Australia is closed” and boat arrivals have stopped. But this couldn’t have
happened without the Indonesian military and police who have done more recently
to apprehend people smugglers and police maritime borders than they have in ten
years of otherwise unwelcoming tolerance of the thousands of refugees and
asylum seekers waiting in transit around the country.
And this in the face of a controversial quasi immigration/
military led unilateral policy that has irritated Jakarta since the 2013
elections and has the Australian media and public locked out of informed debate
by strict terms of operational security.
The Abbott government has managed to bypass the endless
rhetoric and political indolence of Jakarta, circumventing political stonewalls
altogether, and halting boat arrivals with the direct support of the Indonesian
military and police.
Australian Immigration Minister Scott Morrison’s operational
secrecy is, in effect, so as not to ruffle Jakarta’s feathers with public
debate on policies affecting both countries’ sovereignty.
But this military cooperation could stoke a trend that is
seeing military figures on the rise in Indonesian politics, traditionally a
strongman’s game.
TNI previously had to defend claims they were not in line
with government policy over allegations that Moeldoko had personally come to an
agreement on boats with Australian Defence Force Chief Gen. David Hurley.Moeldoko depoliticised the allegations and referred to his own operational discretion, subtly portraying the extent to which the military still commands authority and legitimacy over certain matters.
The Jakarta Post quoted Moeldoko as saying, “My statement did not indicate that I agreed [with the policy], but that I undTies with erstood such tactical moves. And my reasoning was that the UN declaration says that every country has the right to protect its sovereignty. If it were my responsibility, I would have done the same thing. So, that’s the context.”
“I am not talking about foreign policy. I am talking about tactical matters in the field,” he said.
Indonesian lawmakers are angry at this latest Australian ‘provocation’, however Singaporean fighter planes crossed into Indonesian airspace this week, demonstrating that threats to Indonesia’s territorial sovereignty can come from other directions, and extenuating the way that the Indonesian military has reasserted itself into the political debate.
With such sovereign and domestic threats featuring on the
horizon, and the endless corruption scandals biting chunks out of democratic
legitimacy, some
fear that Indonesian voters may turn towards the strong leadership offered
by presidential candidates with a military background, indeed, Prabowo
Subianto, a former general, is second in line to the throne after Joko Widodo.
The presence of conservatively nationalist military actors
in the political sphere signals retrograde forces at play in Indonesia’s still
vulnerable democratisation.
In Indonesia politics can be a largely patrimonial game so
if Australia enjoys special cooperation on a controversial humanitarian issue
now it may one day have to return the favour.
Lauren Gumbs is a writer and human rights student who holds a Masters in Communications.
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