LAKSAMANA.Net, November 30, 2003 11:28 PM
'Ninja Killers' Resurface in East Java
Laksamana.Net - Two kyai religious leaders affiliated to the party of former president
Abdurrahman Wahid were murdered last week in East Java. Wahid maintains the
killings are politically motivated and mark a resurgence in the so-called 'ninja killings'
that swept across the province in 1998.
Wahid held a press conference on Saturday (29/11/2003) with the aim of clarifying
rumors about the mysterious murders and to vent some steam over what he alleges
is a conspiracy to sabotage his party's chances at the 2004 elections.
The near blind but voluble former president confirmed rumors that the two kyai
murdered in Jember and Lumajang, East Java province, were local leaders of the
Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) organization and its political wing, the National Awakening
Party (PKB).
Wahid currently serves as the party's nominal leader in his role as head of its advisory
board.
"The killings are reminiscent of the mass killings by masked assailants in
Banyuwangi several years ago, known as the ninja killings. And now it's back again,"
he told reporters gravely.
A wave of violent killings by individuals or mobs many wearing ninja-style masks
sent East Java reeling in the months following the fall of former president Suharto's
authoritarian regime in 1998.
The initial victims were generally black magic practitioners (dukun santet) but the
terror campaign spread to clerics of the NU Indonesia's largest Muslim organization
then headed by Wahid.
According to figures compiled by the NU, 143 suspected dukun santet were murdered
in Banyuwangi along with another 105 murders in neighbouring regions of East Java
such as Jember, Sumenep and Pasuruan.
The press latched onto the sensationalism of the incidents at the time, with ninja's
said to be able to jump over houses and display other supernatural powers, and
Wahid and others saw the hand of Suharto and the military behind the terror
campaign.
Wahid reasserted that the recent slayings were once again backed by the political
enemies of the NU and PKB.
He appeared to back recent statements by the armed forces commander that certain
elements intended to cause chaos ahead of the national elections slated for April next
year and were targeting the PKB to achieve their ends.
When pressed on the identity of those responsible, Wahid said they were the same
as those behind the 1998 killings and were clearly trained by the intelligence forces,
reported detikcom.
Wahid went even further and told reporters that the principle figure behind the terror
campaign had once served at the State Intelligence Agency (BIN).
"But he's not at BIN anymore. We have proof: statements, video recordings and
others. He is a local and a national state official. This must be stopped because this
country is already full of chaos," Wahid extolled.
Wahid had named the mastermind as 'General K' back in 1998 but he refused to
elaborate further. He also admitted that he had forgotten the names of the murdered
NU clerics.
Police Pragmatic
The National Police have formed a special unit to investigate the killings but have
declined to comment on the allegations launched by Wahid as well as the motive
behind the killings.
National Police deputy spokesman Brig.Gen. Soenarko told reporters on Sunday that
kyai Asmuni Ishak (61), head of the NU branch in Jatiroto district, was murdered in
his home in Kalibotolor village at 02.15 local time on Thursday (27/11/03).
Soenarko admitted that information was scarce on the second murder of a member of
a PKB advisory council in Jatiroto, Lumajang, reported detikcom.
He said an investigation unit comprising East Java police, intelligence officers and
detectives had been formed to investigate the murders.
When questioned on the allegations launched by the former president, Soenarko
merely retorted: "We don't talk politics, just the facts in the field."
Eight people were questioned in relation to the murder of Asmuni Ishak on Sunday,
including his three children who were in the house at the time of the attack.
Asmuni's oldest son, Muhammad Ivan Sauki (27), told police a group of six men burst
into the family home brandishing reapers and explosives and cornered Asmuni and his
wife Hj Mudmaidah in their bedroom.
Ivan and his younger siblings, Amil Mujamilah (23) and Indah Ulinnuha (16), were
threatened as several of the assailants attacked their parents, Soenarko said.
Asmuni died at the house and Hj Mudmaidah was seriously injured, he added.
In addition to the three siblings, five other eyewitnesses aged between 25 and 53
years of age were questioned. All are Jember locals.
One of the eyewitnesses, Sugito (47), told police the assailants masked their faces
but were not well dressed with at least one going barefoot to the house.
History Never Repeats?
The 1998 killings sparked mass hysteria in East Java and the paranoia spread
nation-wide as the country struggled to come to terms with the economic crisis and
the fall of Suharto.
Most analysts now tend to see the spate of horrific killings as a sign of those chaotic
times.
The fall of Suharto and politcial pressure on the police and military that maintained his
repressive regime emboldened locals who felt themselves above the law and many
blamed the killings on localized 'revenge attacks' in East Java, where belief in the
paranormal is a way of life.
Banyuwangi in particular has long been known as one of the most powerful centers of
black magic in Indonesia. The area is also a stronghold of the notoriously syncretic
NU.
The onset of the 'reformasi' era also ushered in the rise of new political forces across
the country.
The NU kyai, as respected religious and social leaders, clearly represented a major
threat to local politicians entrenched under Suharto's New Order regime.
Following extensive research into the issue, Jason Brown summed up the view of
most nonpartisan observers as follows:
The dukun santet murders were merely a lever designed to create chaotic conditions
in East Java, unsettling the staunch NU region and disrupting the formation of
Abdurrahman Wahid's PKB
Local political figures, fearful of the threat posed by
Muslim clerics and the new strong political arm of NU, may have used the dukun
santet slayings for their own political interests by latching onto the 'ninja issue' in
order to launch a terror campaign against the NU community. ( Inside Indonesia, No.
62 April -June 2000)
Wahid clearly believes that the same forces are targeting the NU and PKB yet again
but times have changed somewhat.
While there is no doubt that the political parties have began their official and not so
official electioneering efforts and rivalry is intensifying between major players, the
greatest challenge facing the NU and PKB at present comes from within.
Indeed, many points of contention in the struggle over the political future of the NU
and PKB center on the future role of Wahid himself.
Wahid, whose forefathers established the NU, is a patriarch in the grand sense but he
faces mounting opposition from influential but lower-profile kyai, particularly in East
Java.
These kyai blocked Wahid's attempts to sack PKB secretary general Syaifullah Jusuf
recently and many have spoken out against his intention to run for president on the
PKB ticket at next October's presidential elections.
Such dissension is not new, as a significant proportion of senior NU and PKB leaders
supported Wahid's dismissal from office in July 2001.
After earning himself numerous enemies for attempts at military reform as well as
alleged misuse of state funds among other reasons Wahid was dismissed at a
special session of the legislature in favor of his deputy, current President Megawati
Sukarnoputri.
Perceived disloyalty within the ranks was one of the major contributing factors to the
later split of the PKB and the formation apparently with significant military backing -
of a rival PKB party headed by current Defense Minister Matori Abdul Jalil.
While Jalil is currently gravely ill in Singapore and his party activities on hold,
up-and-coming NU kyai have their sights set on the organization's political future.
In the realm of the supernatural, worldly disaster is seen as a manifestation of inner
disharmony. In the real world, not only do forces seek to undermine their political
enemies but killers whether civilian or military go unpunished for their crimes
Copyright © 2000 - 2002 Laksamana.net, All Rights Reserved.
|