General Suharto, Indonesia‘s former dictator, has died at the age of 86. He was, for many years, Ottawa‘s man in Jakarta.

 

Of course, he was also Washington‘s man in Jakarta. In many ways, he was similar to Washington‘s pre-1990 man in Baghdad. For most of their thuggish careers, he and Saddam Hussein had U.S. support, among other things, in common. Both consolidated their power after participating in bloody purges of communists and radical nationalists. Saddam purged the Left from Iraq‘s Ba’ath Party; Suharto took the helm after helping purge the Left from the Indonesian archipelago – the 1965 coup that overthrew the nationalist government of Sukarno was followed by the murder by death squads of up to a million activists, workers and peasants.

 

Both Saddam and Suharto viciously repressed political opponents and ethnic minorities; both accumulated great personal wealth and handed down top security and economic positions to their children; both illegally annexed small neighbouring states: Kuwait in 1990 and East Timor in 1975, respectively.

 

While the 1991 Gulf War was waged in the name of liberating Kuwait (and restoring a monarchy that denied women the right to vote), the massacre of civilians later that year in East Timor’s capital, Dili, elicited no response from western media and no outcry from western politicians. During the two and a half decades of Indonesian occupation of East Timor, it is estimated that 200 000 people were killed. Suharto’s regime also massacred thousands in other oppressed regions, such as Aceh and West Papua.

 

For all their similarities, then, the politics of empire intervened and led Saddam and Suharto to very different ends. The "butcher of Baghdad" was hanged in a rushed execution, while the butcher of Dili died surrounded by the best medical attention money could buy.

 

In Canada, it’s worth remembering the shameful role with respect to Suharto’s regime played by the Liberal Party, which claims to uphold a humanitarian tradition in its foreign policy.

 

Back in the 1990s, the strongman in Jakarta was respectfully referred to in our mainstream media as President Suharto. He was touted as a modernizer, a unifier, and an important ally in Canada‘s quest to expand trade and investment in Southeast Asia.

 

Canada sold weapons to the dictatorship, which then Liberal Secretary of State for Asia-Pacific Raymond Chan justified on the absurd grounds that they were defensive weapons only.

 

Se konsa, an 1997, lè Vancouver te òganize somè APEC a, gouvènman liberal Jean Chretien a te woule tapi wouj la pou diktatè a, epi li te voye eskwadwon espre pwav ak revòlt sou aktivis yo ki t ap travay pou devwale vyolasyon dwa moun Suharto te fè yo. Konplisite Kanada.

 

At the University of British Columbia, where one of the main gatherings of the heads of state was held, a security fence was erected, "preemptive" arrests were made against protest organizers like Jaggi Singh, and of course pepper spray was used liberally. According to a public inquiry held after the APEC protests, in the lead up to the summit Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy had debased his office to the point of apologizing to the Indonesian authorities for a Suharto "Wanted" poster that had proliferated around town.

 

Lè m te wè spektak sa a tou pre kòm yon bakaloreya, te ban m yon eksperyans aprantisaj entans ak valab sou vrè nati politik la. Retounen nan jou pitorèsk yo anvan "lagè kont latèrè a," dwa nou nan libète lapawòl, asanble ak opozisyon yo te byen vit - otomatikman, reyèlman, ak jistifikasyon yo te fè nan vole - sibòdone ak bezwen yo nan kapital la.

 

Tout diskou ki gen gwo son sou dwa moun ki soti nan renmen Axworthy te disparèt nan yon moman lè li te rive apeze yon patnè biznis kle. Minis Afè Etranjè Liberal ki vin apre yo, tankou Bill Graham ak Pierre Pettigrew, t ap monte antant soti nan konplisite a agresyon kareman lè, pa egzanp, Kanada te jwe yon wòl kle nan ranvèse gouvènman demokratik Ayiti a an 2004.

 

It’s worth noting too that, back in the 1990s, it was initially only very small networks of activists on the Left who worked to bring the plight of East Timor to the public’s attention in Canada. It was a tiny nation, half of an island, with a Roman Catholic majority that was occupied by the world’s most populous Muslim country. Those standing up for self-determination for Palestine and Iraq today, against whom pro-war ideologues trot out Islamophobia and "clash of civilizations" nonsense, were the same people agitating for the freedom of the Timorese, who happened to be a predominantly Christian people.

 

Nan epòk sa a, East Timor Alert Network (ETAN), avèk èd deputy ki pale aklè tankou Svend Robinson nan NDP, te fè gwo travay la pou ekspoze konplisite liberal yo ak krim Suharto yo.

 

A statement on ETAN’s U.S. sister group’s website sums things up eloquently:

 

"Indonesia‘s former dictator General Suharto has died in bed and not in jail, escaping justice for his numerous crimes in East Timor and throughout the Indonesian archipelago…"

 

"Pou simonte eritaj Suharto a epi pou respekte dwa moun debaz entènasyonal yo ak prensip legal yo, moun ki egzekite, ede ak ankouraje, ak benefisye de lòd kriminèl li yo dwe responsab."

 

We can be sure that current Foreign Affairs Minister Maxime Bernier and his Conservative colleagues will make some statements on Suharto’s death parroting whatever comes out of Washington.

 

Men, mwen ta renmen tande pale de Chretien ak Axworthy. Ki sa yo gen pou di pou tèt yo e ki sa yo gen pou di kounye a sou diktatè ke yo te ede, ankouraje, ak pwoteje kont manifestasyon an?

 

Derrick O'Keefe se editè rabble.ca.

 


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Derrick O'Keefe se ko-prezidan Canadian Peace Alliance, pi gwo rezo gwoup anti-lagè nan peyi a, ak yon manm kowòdone Kowalisyon Vancouver StopWar.ca. Li se ko-ekriven nan memwa politik Deputy Afgan an Malalai Joya a, A Woman Among Warlords: The Extraordinary Story of an Afghan Who Dared to Raise Her Voice, ak otè a nan pwochen liv Michael Ignatieff: The Lesser Evil? (Verso, 2010). Derrick te sèvi kòm editè rabble.ca nan ane 2007 pou rive 2009. Sijè yo kouvri nan blog sa a pral enkli lagè nan Afganistan ak politik etranjè, analiz medya, politik Kanadyen ak ekoloji.

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