East Timor refugee aid case heats up
East Timor refugee aid case heats up
Yemris Fointuna, The Jakarta Post, Kupang, East Nusa Tenggara
Pressure has been placed on the relevant authorities to
investigate alleged irregularities in the use of Rp 53 billion
(US$6.3 million) in aid for East Timorese refugees in East Nusa
Tenggara (NTT) province.
The provincial office of the Development Finance Controller
(BPKP) should move quickly to audit the financial aid, director
of the province's Center for Information and People's Advocacy
(PIAR) Sarah Lei Mbuik said on Tuesday.
She said that the disbursement of Rp 5 billion of Japanese aid
should also be investigated. The aid was allegedly used by the
Wirasakti military command to build houses for soldiers who were
among the refugees.
"If the project to develop a settlement at Naibonat village in
Kupang regency was managed by the Indonesian Military (TNI), the
BPKP should perform an audit to ensure transparency," Sarah said.
She was responding to the Timor Express (Timex) daily's recent
report, which criticized the military for its involvement in
developing a settlement for East Timorese refugees.
The article, published last Friday, quoted Karel Yani Mbuik,
deputy chairman of the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle
(PDI-P) for the East Nusa Tenggara chapter.
Karel in the report claimed that there had been irregularities
in the project and urged the BPKP to immediately investigate the
case.
Responding to the report, Wirasakti military commander Col.
Moeswarno Moesanif -- whose command oversees security in Kupang
-- accused the newspaper and Karel of tarnishing both his and the
military's image. Last Friday, the commander filed a complaint
with the Kupang Police, over what he claimed was libel .
On Monday, the Kupang Police questioned Timex's chief editor
Yusak Riwu Rohi.
Yusak later criticized Moesanif's action, saying that his
right to reply, and clarify the report, as stipulated by Press
Law No. 40/1999 had been overlooked.
The editor's team of nine lawyers denied that the report had
been an attack on the local military.
"If the local military commander said that it (the article)
tarnished his good name, he must indicate which part of the
article was defamatory," lawyer Marsel Radja said on Tuesday.
He urged the police to investigate the case under Press Law
No. 40/1999 rather than the Criminal Code.