http://www.thejakartapost.com:80/news/2009/03/13/is-gam-real-or-a-nonentity.html

Saturday, March 14, 2009 10:13 PM
Is GAM real, or a nonentity?
Aboeprijadi Santoso ,  Banda Aceh   |  Fri, 03/13/2009 2:54 PM  |  Opinion 

Whether or not the former rebel Free Aceh Movement (GAM) still exists seems a 
question many consider no longer important. However, in the heat of the 
election campaign now sweeping over Aceh, its implications are serious. 

Perceptions may turn out to be a crucial factor when the ideas involved carry 
symbolic significance and become articles of faith. The GAM and the meaning of 
the acronym, represent for the GAM a sacred icon they want to preserve. For the 
Indonesian military, quite the opposite, the idea represents separatism - the 
antithesis of their very mission of maintaining the unitary state of Indonesia. 

The GAM, mindful of Acehnese identity, wishes to remain loyal to what they 
perceive as Aceh's and GAM's history. So its symbolism will remain, despite the 
fact that the Helsinki agreement leaves no space for a separate Acehnese state. 

The Helsinki MOU allows the GAM to legitimately remain in existence, even 
though it is now stripped of its independence aspirations. Nothing in the MOU 
suggests that it is no longer relevant or indicates that it should be 
dissolved. 

The Indonesian delegation to the Helsinki process in 2005 correctly understood 
this; they never questioned it. As the process drew to a close in July 2005, I 
recalled asking one key delegate, Sofyan Djalil, what was going to happen to 
the GAM. He said he left the matter wholly up to GAM leadership. 

As the implementation of the MOU proceeded, however, the Aceh Monitoring 
Mission (AMM) tried to push GAM leaders to dissolve the movement, to no avail. 

Problems arose as the GAM, now represented by several bodies, groups and 
individuals, won the 2006 local elections. They were mainly represented in the 
Aceh Transition Committee (KPA) and the Aceh Party (Partai Aceh) while GAM 
leadership remains in Sweden. Individual GAM members have since been split in 
different factions, but most remain loyal to GAM leadership, the KPA and the 
Aceh Party. 

There are different factions and perceptions as well in Jakarta. Nationalist 
legislators and (retired) military officers have always been very suspicious of 
the GAM. They made noise about the continuing existence of the GAM and rejected 
the name "Partai GAM". A political party, they said, cannot, at the same time, 
be a movement (yet now there is a party which is also a movement or gerakan 
i.e. the Greater Indonesia Movement Party or Gerindra). 

In reality, their greatest fear concerns the "M" (for merdeka or independence) 
of the GAM and its alleged "hidden agenda". This writer has noted in 
discussions with local officers and Jakarta politicians a strong presumption 
that the GAM will use its democratically won political victory as a future 
basis to demand a referendum. 

Hence, they feel as if they had been cheated when GAM leaders won the 
governorship and many district chief positions in the 2006 elections. Now they 
say we should be worrying about the GAM dominating the 2009 local legislation. 

Sidney Jones, International Crisis Group's senior adviser has pointed out the 
great sensitivity to the symbolism that explicitly links the Aceh Party, the 
GAM and its aged leader Hasan di Tiro. 

Military officers may have different styles of responding to the political 
development, some by being politically correct and, at the other extreme, some 
by shouting - as has been quoted by many - that "the Helsinki MOU is the 
greatest lie in Indonesian history". The latter is worrying and needs 
correction. 

Such responses may be just different styles of the same basic proposition based 
on their training and historic experience. "State sovereignty" is a sacred 
concept in pre-colonial kingdoms and in independent Indonesia. When it comes to 
it, the presence of alien forces and the role of foreigners are taboo. 

And its consequences are severe: First, the Dutch attempt in the 1940s to 
regain Indonesia incited the war of independence; second, the United Nation's 
role to resolve the East Timor issue and hold a plebiscite in 1999 ended in a 
bloody conflict. 

Now it seems the Helsinki MOU is yet again seen as "foreign intervention". Some 
have urged that consultation on the MOU and foreign election observers are no 
longer necessary. 

Amid the election campaign, paranoia has led to terror and xenophobia aimed at 
preventing GAM representatives' victory. There have been about 20 incidents 
targeting the KPA and the Aceh Party. So far, no suspects have been arrested, 
but the series of assaults appeared systematic as it, up to last year, targeted 
vehicles and offices only, but since January, has victimized GAM leaders, as in 
Bireuen and Ujung Kalak, West Aceh. 

Given the rising tensions, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and the visiting 
Aceh peacemaker former Finnish president Martti Ahtisaari were clearly forced 
to issue a stern warning against such attempts to subvert the peace process. 

On the GAM side, there is no question of the popularity of the Aceh Party. But 
its dominance has often been used to intimidate other parties. The KPA and the 
Aceh Party are worried about the apparent persecution, but they too - like 
those who denigrate the Helsinki MOU - need to behave. 

The GAM and "nationalist" officers, each from their opposite points of view, 
treat GAM symbolism as opposite articles of faith. Both should be reminded that 
they are bound to implement the Helsinki pact which respects democracy. 

While the "nationalist" view on GAM's predicament remains as paranoid and 
confusing as this saying suggests, Cut Farah, reflecting ex-GAM combatants' 
views, made it clear that the GAM - i.e. its armed movement - "now no longer 
exists as it now strives toward democracy based on the Helsinki MOU". 

In other words, whatever the nature of the GAM, it is the KPA and the Aceh 
party that actually operate on the ground. 

None of this violates the Helsinki MOU, but only if and when the pact is fully 
implemented, may the GAM's existence logically no longer be relevant. 

The writer is Radio Nederland Jakarta correspondent. 

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