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Datum: den 28 augusti 1999 18:16
�mne: HRW: Why Aceh is Exploding

Human Rights Watch
August 27, 1999

Indonesia: Why Aceh is Exploding

A Human Rights Watch Press Backgrounder

(August 27, 1999, New York)�The twenty-four year conflict in East Timor may
be nearing the end game with voters there choosing on August 30 between
autonomy under Indonesian sovereignty and independence. But a potentially
much more dangerous conflict is spiraling out of control in Aceh, the
resource-rich region on the northern tip of Sumatra. The international
community should be pressing Indonesia to address three of the key
underlying
causes of the conflict: failure to prosecute past abuses; failure to reduce
a
hated military presence; and diversion of locally-produced revenues to
Jakarta.

It's worth a try, but it may already be too late to stop a low-level
insurgency from turning into what may be the most serious threat to
Indonesian unity since it gained independence from the Netherlands in 1949.
A
quick comparison with East Timor is worth noting:

-   East Timor was never considered part of Indonesia until its forcible
annexation in 1976. Aceh, the westernmost part of the Dutch East Indies, was
integral to the Indonesian nationalist movement from the beginning.

-   East Timor has some 800,000 people and few resources, although it
produces coffee, and exploration for oil is continuing offshore. Aceh has
four million people and is rich in oil, gas, timber, and minerals, as well
as
being an extremely fertile agricultural region.

-   East Timor's guerrillas had no known international assistance in terms
of
arms or training. Aceh's guerrillas are reportedly receiving arms through
Malaysia and Thailand, and some have received training in Libya.

-   East Timor is overwhelmingly Catholic, and its people had strong support
from the Catholic church worldwide and from the West, through the presence
of
large expatriate communities in Portugal and Australia. Aceh is
overwhelmingly Muslim, and its sufferings, if not its independence struggle,
have generated strong sympathy within Indonesia, and to some extent from
Muslim communities abroad. There is a large expatriate community of Acehnese
in Malaysia.

-   East Timor's armed resistance had strong popular support from the
outset.
Aceh Merdeka's support in the late 1970s was largely restricted to one
district, Aceh Pidie. From 1980 to 1989, it was quiescent. When it flared
again in 1989, its guerrillas were present in more districts but its popular
support was still limited. It has only emerged as a genuinely grassroots
insurgency in the past six months.

There are three main reasons that the conflict has erupted so virulently,
and
that popular support for Gerakan Aceh Merdeka (GAM or Free Aceh Movement)
guerrillas has grown so fast: popular anger, the return of hundreds of
guerrillas to Aceh from exile following the fall of Soeharto, and Indonesian
military excesses.

The anger stems from the Habibie government's refusal to address a
near-universal demand in Aceh for justice. Between May 1990 and August 1998,
Aceh was designated an area of military operations (daerah operasi militer
or
DOM) so that intensive counterinsurgency operations could be carried out
against GAM. In 1989, a handful of guerrillas returned to Aceh from Libya
where they had received training but no arms. Using weapons acquired largely
from raids on military posts within Aceh, they carried out a series of
attacks on soldiers and non-Acehnese migrants to the region. The Indonesian
army responded with ferocious and indiscriminate force, killing more than a
thousand civilians, often leaving their mutilated bodies by the side of
roads
or rivers. Many more were arrested, tortured, and arbitrarily detained for
months, sometimes years. Hundreds of men disappeared. Many women whose
husbands or sons were suspected of involvement with the guerrillas were
raped. Aceh was under what amounted to total military control until late
1998, with civilian administrators effectively marginalized.

Almost every family in the three districts of Aceh where military operations
were concentrated was affected. In late July, I met with eleven young
people,
now in their twenties, whose fathers disappeared in 1990 and 1991. One of
them remembers soldiers coming to his house and making him lead them to the
ricefields where his father, suspected of giving food to the guerrillas, was
working. When they got to the fields, his father wasn't there. As
punishment,
the soldiers put the boy's hand on the ground and systematically smashed all
the fingers on one hand with a rock. He was twelve at the time; his hand
remains misshapen today. His father was arrested shortly thereafter and has
never been seen since.

The cumulative impact of the DOM-era abuses was not felt until after
President Soeharto stepped down in May 1998, and the political climate
opened
up. Then from June to August 1998, revelations of atrocities filled local
newspapers and nightly television broadcasts, leading to expectations that
military forces would be withdrawn, perpetrators prosecuted, and victims
compensated. In August, General Wiranto, commander of Indonesia's armed
forces, announced the formal ending of military operations, but a ceremony
on
August 31 to mark the withdrawal of troops turned into an ugly riot, as
angry
Acehnese stoned the soldiers, then went on a rampage through the city of
Lhokseumawe. While the initial stoning may have been spontaneous, there is
some evidence that the violence which followed involved local officers,
unhappy at leaving lucrative extra budgetary sources of income, such as
illegal logging and marijuana cultivation.

Between August 1998 and the end of the year, not a single move was made to
hold Indonesian soldiers accountable for atrocities, despite all the new
information that had emerged. At the end of January 1999, an all-Aceh
student
congress proposed a referendum on Aceh's political status, and the idea
caught fire across the province, taken up by activists, local government
officials, and candidates for parliament in the June 1998 election. Moderate
Acehnese leaders told Human Rights Watch in February 1999 that one trial of
an officer for abuses during the DOM period could have halted the referendum
movement in its tracks, but it didn't happen. Instead, GAM effectively took
over from the students the task of popular mobilization, and the demand
shifted from a referendum to independence.

At the same time that more and more atrocities were coming to light, more
and
more GAM rebels were returning to Indonesia. Some of the top field
commanders
apparently returned to Aceh in a shipload of 545 Acehnese deportees, sent
back from Malaysia in late March 1998. But many more returned following
Soeharto's fall that May, mostly from Malaysia but also from Libya; some
also
emerged from hiding in Aceh itself. They began organizing throughout the
districts of North Aceh, Pidie, and East Aceh and in some parts of West and
South Aceh. According to residents of those areas we interviewed in late
July, the main vehicle for getting the independence message across was the
khotbah or sermon at the local mosque, and the message was simple: Aceh has
been oppressed too long, and with independence, all citizens will have
guaranteed employment, free education, and a free pilgrimage to Mecca. GAM
leaders are also reportedly telling their followers that they have the
support of twenty-three countries, and if East Timor could get as far as it
has with the support of just one (Portugal), the prospects for Acehnese
independence are bright. An activist who questioned the extent of GAM's
international support found himself threatened several days later.

As the movement gathered strength, fueled in large part by ham-handed army
efforts to crush it, GAM leaders gradually took over some government
functions. One woman from Lhokseumawe said when people want to get married
in
and around Kandang, a GAM stronghold on the outskirts of the city, they
don't
go to the Office of Religious Affairs any longer; they get GAM witnesses
instead. It is the local GAM commander who settles disputes and signs
documents for sale and purchase of land. The district court in Lhokseumawe
has stopped functioning, all cases have been postponed, and most of the
judges have moved to Medan, capital of North Sumatra, the province to the
south.

GAM has never been particularly respectful of human rights, and it's not
now.
More than one hundred "executions" of suspected informers or cuak have taken
place in Aceh since late 1998. While many in Aceh accuse the army of the
killings in an effort to discredit GAM, many of these killings do appear to
be the work of the guerrillas. One GAM rebel told a man who questioned the
practice, "We don't have resources to build a prison, so our prison is the
ground." Dozens of government installations, including schools and
subdistrict government offices, have been burned, and government employees
attacked or threatened, and some people forced from their homes.

Not all of the attacks attributed to GAM have necessarily been carried out
by
them; GAM has vigorously denied the school burnings, and reports abound of
soldiers disguising themselves as members of a "false GAM" and carrying out
actions designed to look the real GAM look bad. Nevertheless, GAM abuses are
real, and no one should romanticize the movement.

But those abuses pale beside Indonesian army and police excesses. It's as
though all the latter know how to do is open fire, and as the casualties
mount, so does support for GAM. On May 3, security forces opened fire on a
pro-independence rally, killing more than 40. On July 23 in West Aceh, a
combined police and army force surrounded a religious school where it
believed weapons had been hidden. The followers of the charismatic religious
leader there, Teungku Bantaqiah, were mowed down by bullets as were the
teungku and his wife. Over fifty bodies have been recovered from the site.
Not a single soldier was wounded, suggesting the followers were unarmed, and
reportedly only four weapons were found in the school. The army had earlier
suggested that the school was a major ammunition and weapons depot for GAM.

On August 1, the police commander for Aceh announced that a major new
counterinsurgency operation, called Operation Sadar Rencong II, was being
initiated that would involve at least 5,000 new police and army, added to
the
5,000 troops already in place. The operation would also involve civilian
militias, known as Wanra or Kamra, another virtual guarantee of human rights
abuses if past experience is any guide. The operation, according to a local
newspaper, was designed to secure the key road from Banda Aceh to Medan as
well as the Strait of Malacca, and to hunt down arrest, and punish GAM
members(1). That operation, given past history of botched operations and
terrorization of the civilian population, is likely to mean disaster for
ordinary Acehnese.

The Indonesian government has a right to quell insurgencies and protect
citizens within its borders, but that right does not mean license to kill,
torture, or arbitrarily detain. In January, when soldiers beat to death
several suspected GAM detainees, some of whom had no connection whatsoever
to
the movement, the army was quick to arrest and punish those responsible. But
such quick action has not been repeated, and as the insurgency has grown
stronger, the army's tendency has been to ignore or explain away human
rights
violations by its own members.

What can the international community do? First, it can continue to press
both
President Habibie and General Wiranto for prosecutions of officers
responsible for grave abuses during DOM. Habibie formally apologized to the
people of Aceh for the abuses earlier this year, but such apologies carry no
weight unless some form of redress, including prosecution in court, takes
place.

Second, it can urge the Indonesian government to reduce troop strength in
Aceh. Such a reduction would be a huge confidence-building measure by the
Indonesian government toward the Acehnese. True, the conflict is escalating,
but in the past, more troops have just meant more massacres, and that
pattern
appears to be continuing. Moreover, fewer troops might force the government
to explore non-military solutions.

The Acehnese we interviewed also want a third party to mediate the conflict.
The government thus far has rejected it out of hand; it does not want to
give
legitimacy to GAM.

(1) "Kapolri Nyatankan Perang Terbuka dengan GBPK Aceh," Waspada, August 2,
1999.
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For Further Information:
Sidney Jones (New York) +1 212 216 1228

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
TAPOL, the Indonesia Human Rights Campaign
111 Northwood Road, Thornton Heath,
Surrey CR7 8HW, UK
Phone: 0181 771-2904   Fax: 0181 653-0322
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Internet: www.gn.apc.org/tapol
Campaigning to expose human rights violations in
Indonesia, East Timor, West Papua and Aceh

25 years - and still going strong
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