Indonesia has "downgraded" its relations with Australia and suspended cooperation on people smuggling following outrage over reported eavesdropping on senior Indonesian leaders' phones, officials said Wednesday.
Meanwhile,
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott told Australia's Parliament that
he would do everything he "reasonably can" to repair relations with
Indonesia.
Australian Broadcasting Corp. and The Guardian reported Monday that they had documents from National Security Agency
leaker Edward Snowden showing that the top-secret Australian Signals
Directorate targeted Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's
cellphone and the phones of first lady Kristiani Herawati and eight
other government ministers and officials.
Indonesia's intelligence agency
chief, Norman Marciano, told reporters Wednesday that he had been
assured by Australian intelligence officials that the wiretapping has
stopped and will not resume.
A spokesman for Australia's top spy agency, the Australian Security Intelligence
Organization, declined to comment on Marciano's claim of such an
assurance. The spokesman refused to be named, citing ASIO policy.
Marciano spoke before attending a meeting called by Yudhoyono to discuss the issue with Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa and Indonesia's recalled ambassador to Australia.
Natalegawa said that Indonesia was reviewing bilateral cooperation on issues with its neighbor.
"We
have downgraded the level of relations between Indonesia and
Australia," he said. "Like a faucet, it is turned down one by one."
Yudhoyono
told a news conference after the meeting that he expected a formal
explanation if Australia wants to maintain good bilateral relations.
"Clearly, I asked for temporary termination of cooperation on intelligence exchanges and information sharing," he said.
"I
also asked for the termination of joint exercises between Indonesia and
Australia, either for army, navy, air force or a combination," he said,
adding that the snooping reminded him of the Cold War era.
The
termination affects cooperation on the thorny issue of people smuggling
between the two countries. Indonesia is a transit country for thousands
of asylum seekers hoping to reach Australia's Christmas Island
by boat. Many people have died while attempting the dangerous journey,
and the immigration issue remains a political hot potato in Australia.
Abbott
won elections in September on a promise to stop the asylum seeker boats
and is relying on Indonesia's cooperation to achieve this goal. He has
also ruled out an apology or explanation on the spying allegations.
On
Tuesday, Yudhoyono criticized Abbott for not expressing regret over the
spying, which reportedly took place in 2009 under a previous Australian
government.
In the Australian capital
of Canberra on Wednesday, Abbott told Parliament that while he would
try to repair relations with Indonesia, he did not "propose to overreact
now" to anger over the issue.
"I deeply and sincerely regret the
embarrassment that media reports have caused President Yudhoyono, who is
a very good friend of Australia, perhaps one of the very best friends
that Australia has anywhere in the world," Abbott said. "I do understand
how personally hurtful these allegations have been, these reports have
been, for him and his family."
"My intention, notwithstanding the
difficulties of these days, is to do everything I reasonably can to help
to build and strengthen the relationship with Indonesia, which is so
important to both our countries," he said.
But Abbott failed to
directly answer a question asked by opposition leader Bill Shorten: What
progress had been made to restore Australia's relationship with
Indonesia?
Abbott, however, said he would respond quickly and
fully to a letter Yudhoyono told reporters he was writing to the prime
minister.
Analysts describe the furor as the lowest point in an
often volatile bilateral relationship since 1999, when Australia led a
U.N. military force into the former Indonesian province of East Timor
following a bloody independence ballot. At that time, Indonesia ripped
up a 4-year-old security treaty with Australia. A new treaty has since
been signed.
Tidak ada komentar :
Posting Komentar