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Spying halts Oz-Indonesia military drills

The move came as anger mounted in Indonesia at claims Australian spies targeted the phone of the president and his inner circle, with protesters in the central city of Yogyakarta burning an Australian flag in protest.

‘Our people are furious, our country is insulted. Fight Australia,’ chanted dozens of students as they demonstrated at a university campus on Wednesday.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono announced yesterday that cooperation with Australia was being halted in a number of areas, including on people-smuggling, military exercises and intelligence sharing.
Military chief Moeldoko said two military training exercises had already been suspended.

‘What’s the point of joint training when they don’t trust us?’ said the head of the armed forces, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, late on Wednesday.

He said a joint exercise in Darwin, northern Australia, which had been due to go on until Sunday, was being suspended and six F-16 fighter jets involved in it would return to Indonesia.

A joint training exercise with the Indonesian army’s special forces, Kopassus, in Lembang, West Java province, was also being suspended, he said.

The escalating row triggered by reports on Australian spying, based on documents leaked by US intelligence fugitive Edward Snowden, has pushed ties between Jakarta and Canberra to their lowest level since the turn of the century.

Jakarta has recalled its ambassador from Australia over the scandal and Yudhoyono has lambasted Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott for failing to show what he sees as a lack of remorse.

Abbott has expressed regret for any embarrassment caused but has so far refused to apologise, further infuriating Jakarta.
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