Observers
believe the military is whipping up the spectre of a communist threat as their
role in the 1965-66 killings comes under scrutiny
Police and the military have
in recent weeks rounded up people for allegedly spreading communism – which
remains outlawed in Indonesia – through logos on T-shirts.
They have also seized books
about communism and stopped a film screening that touched on the subject.
It came after the government
last month took timid steps towards making peace with one of the nation’s
darkest chapters – the killing of at least 500,000 people in anti-communist
massacres in 1965-66, conducted by local groups with military support.
The killings began after
General Suharto put down a coup attempt blamed on communists. He rose to power
on the back of the bloodshed, and went on to lead Indonesia with an iron fist
for three decades.
During his rule, the massacres
were presented as necessary to rid the country of communism – Indonesia had the
world’s third-biggest communist party before the killings.
Public debate about the
killings was taboo, and no one was ever held to account.
Since Suharto’s 1998 downfall
and Indonesia’s transformation into a freewheeling democracy, there have been
growing calls to re-examine one of the worst mass killings of the 20th century,
and even for an official apology.
Last month the government took
steps towards coming to terms with the episode by backing for the first time
public discussions into the killings – attended by survivors and members of the
military – and they announced they would investigate sites that activists say
are mass graves.
But the moves swiftly sparked
a backlash from the military and police.
Conservative elements of the
security forces began speaking out against a supposed communist resurgence,
despite the fact the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) was wiped out during the
1960s massacres.
Observers believe the military
is whipping up the spectre of a communist threat as their role in the killings
comes under scrutiny.
Those caught up in the
backlash potentially face tough punishments, as spreading communist ideology is
punishable by up to 12 years in jail.
There have been other reports
from across the country of people being detained for wearing T-shirts with
hammer and sickle images, and police stopped the screening of a documentary
about Buru Island where suspected communist sympathisers were once held
prisoner.
Security forces have been
cracking down on attempts to hold public discussions about the killings since
last year, as the country marked the 50th anniversary of the start of the
massacres, but the current wave of arrests for promoting communist ideology
only began in recent weeks.
Authorities have backed the
crackdown, with the interior ministry noting a “growing phenomenon” of
communism.
But for many of Indonesia’s
younger generation, who are more willing to question the old narrative about
the communist killings, the security forces are going over the top.
South China Morning Post
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