Tulisan di bawah ini bisa membantu buat calon gubernur
baru aceh, atau pengamat aceh, atau siapa aja. ini
fakta. enggak usah repot-repot ngeramal sepertu bung
eko darminto

salam
K.



Indonesia: How Islamist Fanatics Diverted Tsunami
Donations

On Boxing Day, December 26, 2004 a tsunami struck
southeast Asia. People in the West were shocked by the
carnage. Many Western tourists on Christmas vacation
in Thailand were swept away. The images of the
tsunami, captured as it surged inland by hand held
video cameras, and images of the scale of its
aftermath, touched the consciences of people
throughout the world. Donations began to pour in to
the stricken regions.

The worst affected area was the province of Aceh, on
the northeastern tip of Sumatra in Indonesia. 260,000
people lost their lives, with 170,000 of these in
Indonesia. Western aid workers were despatched to
Banda Aceh, the coastal regency which received the
full force of the giant wave.

As philanthropic work was being carried out by these
relief workers, the Islamists were quick to exploit
the situation to their own ends. Foremost among these
were the militants of the Front Pembela Islam, or
Islamic Defenders' Front. In January 2005, Hasri
Husan, a leader of the group, made plain to Christian
charity workers that any who attempted to "spread
Christianity" would be killed. "We will chase down any
Christian group that does anything beyond offering
aid," he threatened, making a gesture of
throat-slitting.

The Front Pembela Islam is one of the main forces
which is trying to turn Indonesia's "moderate" version
of Islam into a hardline sharia-controlled variety.
They had 5,000 individuals in the tsunami disaster
area within a month of the calamity. Other groups who
came to Banda Aceh were the Islamic extremists of Hizb
ut-Tahrir and Laskar Mujahideen. The latter group had
been involved in fighting a sectarian religious war in
Sulawesi and the Moluccas between 1998 and 2002, which
killed 9,000 people, mostly Christians.

One local group took advantage of the tsunami's
destruction to finally gain a semi-autonomy within
Indonesia. The GAM (Gerakan Aceh Merdeka) had been
fighting for thirty years for independence. 15,000
people had died in the fighting between the factions
of GAM and government. In August 2005, a peace deal
was signed in Finland between GAM representatives and
indonesia.

By October 2000, 500,000 people still remained
homeless in Aceh as a result of the tsunami, but by
this time, the Islamists in the region had made steps
towards implementing full sharia law.

A religious police force, called the Wilayatul Hisbah
was able to control the population, exploiting
religious beliefs to enact strict discipline upon the
stricken survivors. Marluddin Jalil, a sharia judge,
told people in the region last December that "The
tsunami was because of the sins of the people of
Aceh". He also said that it had brought about because
women had been sinful. A year ago, he was telling
housewives: "The Holy Koran says that if women are
good, then a country is good."

Sharia law had officially been introduced in 2002 to
Aceh - the first of Indonesia's 33 provinces to enact
Islamic law. Before the tsunami, enforcement of
Islamic law generally applied only to issues of family
law, but with the promotion of the myth that the
tsunami had come because of the region's sins, its
enforcers became more draconian. The Wilyatul Hisbah
made sure that women were to be kept under strict
control. Women without headscarfs were hunted down,
and if girls were found in cars with boyfriends, they
were taken in front of the Islamic courts. If a woman
is in close proximity to a man who is not a close
family member or her husband, she is guilty of an
Islamic crime called "khalwat". Additionally, women
transgressors were paraded in public in an open car, a
spectacle of shame to be jeered at by their
communities.

In Lhokseumawe, 20 women had been punished in this way
last December. Canings began to take place under
sharia, but last year these punishments, which had
previously taken place in private, became public
spectacles. By March this year, 100 men and women in
Aceh had been subjected to beatings.

The BBC described this month how trucks containing
members of the Wilayatul Hisbah drive around,
specifically looking for people to target. One woman
member of this morality police said: "We just patrol
around. We look for anyone not wearing proper Islamic
dress, or any couples who are hanging out together
without being married. We usually head down towards
the beach - there's where lots of people hang out."

Even a husband and wife who are sitting in a car get a
stern lecture from the Wilyatul Hisbah enforcers. The
woman told the BBC: "We reminded them that in Aceh you
have Sharia Law now and you're not allowed to do this
even though they were actually husband and wife. This
is a public place and it stirs up socially jealousy -
people don't know they're husband and wife, so they're
not allowed to do it."

Under sharia law, there is nothing to prevent a man
sitting in close proximity with his wife. But power
obviously has corrupted many within the Wilyatul
Hisbah.

In theory, under Sharia Law, the law is applied to
Muslims. Where there is a civil code and Sharia, a
non-Muslim should be tried under the civil code, but
not in Aceh.

In April this year, a minister in the Indonesian
government, state secretary Yusril Ihza Mahendra,
announced that in one district of Aceh, non-Muslims
would not be allowed the option of being tried under
the Indonesian civil code.

Yusril announced that a new Islamic Court would be set
up in Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam district. Non-Muslims
who are accused of crimes like theft and adultery will
have no choice but to submit to sharia by-laws. The
state secretary said a two-tier legal system would
create legal confusion. He said: "Should such freedom
be given, non-Muslims will certainly choose to be
tried under the Criminal Code, because it carries more
lenient punishment."

In mid-July this year, the public beatings (carried
out with a rattan or cane, which must be 1.2 meters
long) took on a new dimension of spectacle, when a
caning was broadcast nationally. 27-year old Saifullah
Bin Ali had been caught by the Wilyatul Hisbah
drinking alcohol. He was taken onto a stage, forced to
kneel, and was lashed with the cane. He had been
sentenced to 40 lashes, but after 7 strokes, he passed
out. 

Members of the WIlyatul Hisbah carry a blue book,
entitled The Law of Islam in Aceh at a Glance. This
lists the varioous punishments for transgressing
Sharia.

Not going to the mosque for Friday prayers on three
occasions: six months' jail or three strokes of the
cane.

Eating and drinking in public during the fasting
month: four months' jail or two strokes of the cane.

Consuming alcohol: 40 strokes of the cane.

Committing an immoral act such as sex outside
marriage: maximum nine strokes of the cane and minimum
three strokes and/or a fine.

The Sharia law enforced in Aceh is only partial, as it
does not allow for amputations or stoning to death for
"zina" - illicit intercourse, such as adultery. Some
Muslim clerics bemoan this lack of totalitarianism in
their sharia arrangements. Mawardi Sirega, a Muslim
teacher, said: "Shariat Islam in Aceh is only
lipstick."

For many within Aceh, particularly women and human
rights workers, the sharia system as enforced by the
Wilyatul Hisbah has already gone too far from the
values they enjoyed in Aceh when it was just another
province in Indonesia. 

The Sunday Times today reports on the situation in
what has now become in the eyes of many of its
inhabitants a corrupt province. And as someone who
donated the contents of my penny jar (more than $50)
to tsunami relief, I find it shocking to hear that the
implementation of sharia by over-zealous Islamists has
been funded in the main from tsunami donations.

The Times states that international aid workers and
Indonesian women's organizations are shocked to find
donations intended for relief have been siphoned off
to subsidize a top-heavy bureaucracy and more
enforcers of the Wilyatul Hisbah. According to some,
there are more of the Wilyatul Hisbah than there are
regular police, and many of these Islamist "enforcers"
are aggressive young men.

A woman lecturer at the Ar-Raniri University in Aceh,
Nurjannah Ismail, said: "Who are these sharia police?
They are men who, most of the time, are trying to send
the message that their position is higher than women."

In Lhokseumawe, women are to be subjected to a
gender-based curfew, if current plans come to
fruition. No woman will be allowed out after dark.

As a result of the activities of the Front Pembela
Islam and the Indonesian Ulemas Council (MUI), several
provinces and municipalities have already enforced
sharia by-laws, and women caught outside after dark
have been prosecuted for prostitution.

The public canings have now numbered 140 in the
province. But worse may be to come. Today's Jakarta
Post reports on the consternation which has greeted
the new bill which has been proposed in Aceh -
amputation. I cannot believe anyone gave their
donations to the tsunami remotely believing that their
gifts would be ear marked for this.

The "Bill on thieves" contains the following:

Chapter 4: Anyone stealing others' belongings (that
are) equal to 94 grams of gold with the intention of
possession faces the threat on hand-amputation
(jarimah uhud) 

Chapter 5: Anyone stealing others' belongings equal to
94 grams of gold or more faces the threat of a maximum
60 canings (uqubuat ta'zir) and a minimum 20 canings
or a maximum fine of Rp 60 million and a minimum Rp 20
million or a maximum ten years' imprisonment and a
minimum 39-month jail sentence.

Chapter 7: Anyone stealing others' belongings equal to
six but less than 46 grams of gold faces the threat of
15 canings at maximum and five caning in minimum, a
maximum fine of Rp 15 million and a minimum Rp 5
million or a maximum 30 month-jail sentence and
minimum ten-month jail sentence.

Chapter 8: Anyone stealing others' belongings equal to
less than six grams of gold faces a maximum five
canings and minimum two canings, or a maximum fine of
5 million and Rp 2 million in minimum, or a maximum
ten-month jail sentence and a minimum four-month jail
sentence.

There are still signs of hope for those who wished for
the moderate version of Islam favored by the majority
of Indonesians to thrive in Aceh. There were
gubernatorial elections on Monday December 11, part of
the package of reforms promised in the August 2005
peace deal negotiated between the GAM rebels and the
government.

The clear victor in the elections was Irwandi Yusuf,
though vote-counting has yet to be officially
completed. Irwandi is a graduate in veterinary
science, which he studied in Oregon. He had been in
prison as a GAM fighter two years ago. After the
tsunami arrived, he escaped from jail and joined other
GAM representatives in Finland.

He is not impressed by the way sharia has been
implemented by moral vigilantes. He says it would be
better to impose sharia amputations on people who are
engaged in corruption in Aceh's bureaucracy. He
claimed: "If the harsh bill is imposed on corrupters
it will effectively help eliminate or minimize the
corruption that has contributed to the poverty of a
majority of the Acehnese people."

"Sharia law was created not to get humans in trouble
but to form an Islamic religious community. How can we
prohibit people from stealing what they need to
survive after their rights have long since been
stolen. The bill will be effective only after the
people's social welfare has improved."

As governor, he will be entitled to pass or prohibit
bills. He has said that he will not pass such a bill.
He said on Friday: "I will never agree to such a stiff
bill. Common people steal because they're hungry and
they usually commit such crimes because their
situation forces them to do so. It is not fair to
impose such a harsh sanction on the common people."

There is still an air of tension in Aceh. The
international Aceh Monitoring Mission (AMM) has now
left, after monitoring the elections for provincial
governor. Their mandate ran out on December 15, and if
the peace which has lasted so far breaks down, it will
be up to the corrupt authorities in Aceh to maintain
law and order. If corruption is not imposed on the
poll results and Irwandi Yusuf takes up his post as
governor, then the amputation bill will become vetoed.
Whether he will act to draw back the powers of the
vigilantes within the Wilyatul Hisbah is another issue entirely.

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