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DKP points finger at Prabowo

| Source: JP

DKP points finger at Prabowo

JAKARTA (JP): The abduction of political activists were not
ordered by the Armed Forces' (ABRI) top brass, but were carried
out because of then Army Special Force (Kopassus) chief Lt. Gen.
Prabowo Subianto's interpretation of his superiors' instructions,
the Officers Honor Council (DKP) concluded yesterday.

Council chairman Gen. Subagyo Hadisiswoyo told a media
conference that Prabowo's instructions were only to "monitor" the
activists' moves, especially in Jakarta.

"It was Prabowo's own interpretation which led to the decision
to kidnap the activists," Subagyo said after chairing a hearing
of the seven-member council with Prabowo at the Army headquarters
on Jl. Merdeka Utara in Central Jakarta.

Prabowo had reportedly acted on his own initiative and had
been given autonomy by his superiors to maintain stability with
whatever means he deemed necessary.

Subagyo, also the Army chief of staff, however, said the
council would still need to cross-check Prabowo's testimony with
those of other officers and witnesses.

Subagyo denied speculation that there had been two different
orders -- each given by then Armed Forces commander Gen. (ret.)
Feisal Tanjung and Army chief of staff Gen. Wiranto -- regarding
the military campaign to control the activists, a situation which
led to confusion on Prabowo's part.

"That's not true," he said.

He said the questioning would continue today, but did not
indicate who would appear before the council.

Riding in a dark green Land Rover, Prabowo arrived at 8:20
a.m. at the Army headquarters in full uniform for his
questioning. The hearing, which was held in closed chambers,
started at 9 a.m. and ended at about 3:30 p.m.

A horde of reporters, both foreign and domestic, were
prevented from entering the compound and had to wait across the
street.

Also testifying as witnesses yesterday were Col. Chairawan,
the former chief of Kopassus' Group of Intelligence Operations,
and members of the Armed Forces fact-finding team, including its
chief, National Military Police Chief Maj. Gen. Syamsu Djalal.

Other team members testifying were assistant for intelligence
affairs for the Armed Forces chief of general affairs Rear Adm.
Berty Ekel; chief military prosecutor Maj. Gen. Timur P.
Manurung; and assistant for security affairs to the Armed Forces
chief of general affairs Maj. Gen. Marwan Paris.

Prabowo, together with his successor Maj. Gen. Muchdi
Purwopranjono and Col. Chairawan, is now under intensive
investigation by the ABRI-initiated council for his alleged role
in the kidnappings and torture of political activists.

Many of the activists critical of former president Soeharto
disappeared in the run-up to the general session of the People's
Consultative Assembly last March. Analysts said the mission was
an all-out campaign to maintain Soeharto's power.

The Assembly reelected Soeharto for a seventh consecutive term
at the time.

Some of those missing have since reappeared. One by one, they
have come forward to tell of their ordeals. In each case the
activists were made to suffer torture often used by the military
to extract confessions.

Only nine of the missing activists, however, have returned
home. The Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence
(Kontras), which is conducting its own investigation into the
abductions, believes that 12 others are still missing.

A separate investigation into 10 other Kopassus personnel,
allegedly involved in the actual abductions, is underway.

Last week, the chief of the military police, Maj. Gen. Syamsu
Djalal, who is in charge of the Armed Forces' investigation into
the abductions, said the dossiers on the ten were almost
completed and would soon be submitted to the Jakarta military
tribunal.

The council started the investigation into the kidnappings
last Tuesday. The first official to appear before the council was
Chairawan, while Muchdi testified last Thursday.

The council also inspected several locations, believed to be
the sites where the abductees were held, at the Kopassus
headquarters in Cijantung, East Jakarta, last Wednesday. (imn)

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