Jakarta Globe – AFP, February 17, 2014
Jakarta.
Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said Monday that reports of
Australian spies targeting Indonesian officials during a trade dispute with the
United States were “mind-boggling.”
Indonesia
has been embroiled in trade disputes with the US over its exports of clove
cigarettes and shrimp in recent years, and has lashed out at Canberra over
previous allegations that it spied on the Indonesian president and other top
officials.
“I find
that a bit mind-boggling and a bit difficult how I can connect or reconcile
discussion about shrimps and how it impacts on Australia’s security,” Marty
told reporters, referring to claims made in a weekend report by the New York
Times.
The report
said Australia offered intelligence to the US National Security Agency (NSA) to
give Washington leverage during a trade dispute with Jakarta.
Marty’s
comments came during a joint press conference with US Secretary of State John
Kerry, who responded to questions about the report, saying: “We take this issue
very seriously, which is why President Obama laid down a series of concrete and
substantial reforms.”
The report,
based on leaked documents by former NSA analyst Edward Snowden, said that the
Australian Signals Directorate offered the NSA information “including
communications between Indonesian officials and the American law firm” that was
representing Jakarta in the trade dispute.
Australian
Prime Minister Tony Abbott defended Sunday his government’s use of intelligence
material, but refused to confirm the allegations made in the New York Times.
However,
Abbott said that Australia did not “use anything that we gather as part of our
ordinary security and intelligence operations to the detriment of other countries.”
“We use it
for the benefit of our friends. We use it to uphold our values,” he said. ”We
use it to protect our citizens and the citizens of other countries, and we
certainly don’t use it for commercial purposes.”
Jakarta has
responded furiously to previous reports of Canberra’s spying that led to a
major breakdown in bilateral ties, and tensions are simmering between the
countries over a hardline Australian military operation to turn
people-smuggling boats back to Indonesia.
Agence France-Presse

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