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http://www.smh.com.au/world/red-flag-for-aceh-autonomy-20130415-2hvm2.html

Red flag for Aceh autonomy
  Date  April 15, 2013 - 3:45PM 
  a.. 

Michael Bachelard

JAKARTA: Nine years after a tsunami devastated the province of Aceh and drove 
its separatist chieftains to the negotiating table with Indonesia, rebel 
symbolism is back in vogue in the country's westernmost province.

A decision in March by Aceh's year-old regional government to gazette the flag 
of the former separatist movement, GAM, as the official flag of the province 
has stirred up old animosities and posed questions about the future.

The central government has given Aceh's leaders until Tuesday to reverse the 
flag decision under threat of having it overturned. But Jakarta is likely to 
realise that heavy handed action could reopen the wounds stitched closed across 
a negotiating table in Helsinki in 2005.

Back then, Aceh was given special privileges — including its choice of flag — 
which are not afforded to other regions of Indonesia. In return, a 30-year 
armed separatist struggle ended. 

But Aceh's move now to adopt the crescent-and-star flag is literally a red rag 
to the national bull.

As a vast ethnically and culturally diverse country, any threat, even symbolic, 
to Indonesia's motto “Unity in Diversity” is taken very seriously indeed. The 
loss of East Timor in 1999 still stirs national resentment and the country 
fights hard to contain a separatist movement in West Papua. There, too, flags 
are an issue.

In 2007, the Indonesian government passed a regulation specifically prohibiting 
provinces adopting separatist symbols.

To the governor and deputy governor of Aceh, former leaders of GAM, Zaini 
Abdullah and Muzakir Manaf, this is a test of what Aceh's special deal with 
Indonesia really means.

The preamble of the agreement which brought about peace in 2005 said it was 
signed because “only the peaceful settlement of the conflict will enable the 
rebuilding of Aceh after the tsunami disaster on 26 December 2004”.

The rebuilding task has been a success. With the help of national and 
international funds, Aceh's physical infrastructure has recovered, it held a 
largely peaceful election and transition of government last year, and it has 
developed its own distinctive political culture (based on a strict and often 
controversial application of Islamic sharia law). It remains poor, but is 
participating in the economic life of the country.

Now it's clear that differing expectations about the extent of Aceh's power 
were baked into the 2005 accords.

According to ANU academic Ed Aspinall, Aceh's position on the flag “can be seen 
as a deliberate move to challenge … to test the limits of their autonomy”.

In 2005, the negotiators on the Indonesian side believed they had achieved a 
relatively tame Aceh, governed by “special autonomy [the law under which Papua 
is also governed] with a few new clauses”,

Professor Aspinall says. The GAM negotiators, by contrast, believed they had 
achieved something akin to self-government.

The flag issue was, perhaps deliberately, left ambiguous.

Even at the time it was a bone of contention. GAM commander Sofyan Dawood said 
during negotiations that the “the flag of Aceh is the moon and star flag as 
used by GAM”, but government negotiator Sofyan Djalil said the Aceh flag could 
“not be like the GAM flag.

The flag issue may also be a signal that Aceh's government will begin kicking 
against the traces of the 2005 deal in other, more important areas.

Behind it is a nascent fear in Aceh that the peace deal did not deliver much 
more autonomy than most other regions enjoy. This has become clear as Aceh 
tries to develop a new plan for the use and exploitation of its vast and 
fauna-rich forests. As Aceh favours more development, and Jakarta shapes to 
block it, the region's lawmakers are becoming painfully aware of the 
limitations of their power


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