Bagus BT Saragih and Yuliasri Perdani, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Headlines | Wed, May 01 2013, 10:08 AM
Paper Edition | Page: 1
A string of criminal acts committed by members of the
Indonesian Military (TNI) in the first four months of 2013 have raised
concerns over the deteriorating level of discipline in the armed forces.
The
arrest of Semarang Naval Base commander Col. Anter Setiabudi by the
National Narcotics Agency (BNN) in Semarang, Central Java, on drug
charges is the latest of many scandals to hit the TNI.
The most
recent incident comes at a time when the military is trying to regain
public trust after the murder of four inmates by 11 Army’s Special
Forces (Kopassus) commandos in Yogyakarta and attacks on the Indonesian
Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) headquarters by a group of TNI
soldiers in Jakarta.
TNI commander Adm. Agus Suhartono admitted that training and supervision of military personnel should be improved.
“Those
who break the law will be tried and receive proper punishment. Aside
from that, the personnel development and supervision, at the hands of
commandants, will be improved,” Agus told The Jakarta Post on Tuesday.
Anter
was arrested along with Brig. Rahmat Sutopo, a police officer from
Central Java Police intelligence division, for selling and consuming
crystal methamphetamine, according to the BNN.
“[Rahmat] was
arrested at 1 a.m. on Monday when he was about to deliver crystal meth
to [Anter] at the Ciputra Hotel in Simpang Lima, Semarang,” BNN deputy
Insp. Gen. Benny Mamoto said at a press conference at the BNN
headquarters in Jakarta.
After his arrest, the BNN forced Rahmat
to confess who the narcotics were intended for. The disgraced police
officer then assisted BNN agents raid a room at the hotel where the
Naval commander was found taking crystal meth. The agency found eight
ecstasy pills and 0.3 grams of meth in the room, allegedly belonging to
Anter.
Both suspects were brought to Jakarta but the case against Anter was handed over to the Navy Military Police later on Tuesday.
The
Navy said Anter was the first middle-ranking officer to be charged with
drug abuse. Navy spokesman First Adm. Untung Surapati said Anter had
been dismissed from his post following his arrest.
Former TNI
commander Gen. (ret.) Endriartono Sutarto suggested that soldiers
committed violent acts because the government did not provide enough
incentives for them.
“At the beginning of reformation era,
businesses handled by the TNI were eradicated. All TNI expenses now come
from the state budget. But, in reality, the state budget cannot cover
many things, such as housing for soldiers,” he said in a telephone
interview.
Endriartono, who led the TNI between 2002 and 2006,
said that soldiers were depressed as they had been unable to voice their
political aspirations after the fall of Soeharto’s New Order regime in
1998. “We used to have the TNI faction at the House of Representatives.
When they dissolved the faction the government offered no substitute.”
He
added that the government should allocate a higher budget for the
military, particularly to upgrade its obsolete military equipment. “Give
the military their toys,” said Endriartono, who now chairs the NasDem
Party’s advisory council.
Senior analyst from the Center For
Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), J Kristiadi, suggested that
the cases involving military personnel may only be the tip of the
iceberg
“If a middle-ranking personnel like the Naval commander in Semarang committed crimes, the iceberg might be huge,” he said.
Kristiadi
urged the TNI to evaluate the quality if its education and training.
“Punishment is important, but internal evaluation is equally important,”
he said.
The TNI has been under the media spotlight for a number
incidents, ranging from assault to murder. Last week, for instance, the
Bandung Military Court II-09 handed down the death penalty for
23-year-old Second Pvt. Mart Azzanul Ikhwan for the murder of a pregnant
woman and her mother in Garut. (Ainur Rohmah contributed to the story
from Semarang)
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