Inside Indonesia, Jan- Mar 2005
Why not independence?
Challenging the myths about Aceh's national liberation movement

William Nessen 

It was late 2002 and I was in Banda Aceh's best hotel talking to a US embassy 
official. He was preparing for an impending cease-fire between the Free Aceh 
Movement (Gerakan Aceh Merdeka, GAM), and the Indonesian government. He was 
part of the international chorus telling the world that what the Acehnese 
really wanted was peace. When I countered that they wanted independence too, he 
responded impatiently: that may be, but they certainly don't have good enough 
reason. 

Provoked, I proceeded to list their reasons: several hundred years running to 
the 20th century as a sovereign state; the greatest resistance in the 
archipelago to Dutch colonial conquest; broken or empty Indonesian promises of 
autonomy; pillage of natural resources; de facto military occupation; the 
crushing of non-violent dissent; the killing, torture and rape of thousands and 
the absence of any justice for these crimes. All leading, I said, to a complete 
absence of trust in Indonesia.

The embassy man shrugged. 'What they need is some justice, economic fairness, 
and peace,' he said. 'They just don't have a big enough gripe.'

Foreign partisanship

The words of this embassy official sum up the dismissive attitude that the 
Acehnese face internationally. One of the great tragedies of the conflict in 
Aceh is that so few outsiders seem to know what the Acehnese want or why.

When the East Timorese struggled for independence, they eventually attracted 
advocates and admirers around the world. That support helped the East Timorese 
sustain hope during decades of Indonesian occupation. 

In Aceh, despite an overwhelming desire for independence and an unending 
roll-call of Indonesian brutality, foreign governments, NGOs, policy analysts 
and others have all sought to convince the Acehnese to accept Indonesian rule.

No one - except the Acehnese themselves - proposes independence as a solution. 
Fearing the unraveling of the world's fourth most populous country and hampered 
by a shallow view of international law and a lack of first-hand reporting and 
comparative analysis with other national liberation struggles, even 
well-meaning foreigners can't think sensibly about the conflict. And so 
partisanship in favour of continued Indonesian control simply appears neutral.

During a total of a year in Aceh between 2001 and 2003, which included time 
spent with GAM guerillas and the Indonesian military and in jail, I discovered 
that much of what passes as balanced scholarship and fair commentary about the 
conflict perpetuates myths instead.

Caught in the middle?

It is a late afternoon in mid-June 2003, a month into the government's 
biggest-ever offensive and I am travelling with a company of GAM guerrillas. We 
have stopped to rendezvous with other fighters in a village a dozen kilometres 
from a main spur road. Fighters are washing laundry, drinking coffee and 
relaxing with villagers, many of whom are relatives or life-long friends. 

Suddenly, there are loud bursts of automatic-rifle fire. Without knowing the 
guerrillas are there, Indonesian soldiers have strolled out of the woods. 
Overconfident, guerrilla company commanders failed to post lookouts far enough 
afield.

Male villagers, dozens of guerrillas and I retreat in panic. Soon, however, we 
are moving in two long columns of a hundred men each, and the commanders have 
begun to organise the fighters to protect the rest of us. But for the first 
time since I've been with them, the fighters are scared; a vice-commander draws 
the edge of his hand across his neck - we are finished, surrounded. As the sun 
sets, we walk swiftly along a dirt road past small wooden houses where women 
are weeping and crying out for God to save us and bring harvest to Aceh's 
struggle.

Before daybreak, a group of old men appears. They are the men the young 
fighters here turn to when they've reached their limits. These elders have 
organised a dangerous zigzag through the tightening Indonesian ring. We set out 
in groups of 20, ten minutes apart, each group with a guide silently steering 
us this way and that, pausing to listen and to send small boys ahead to make 
sure the route remains clear.

One of the common bits of nonsense one hears about Aceh is that most Acehnese, 
even those who support independence, don't support GAM. Hapless victims, 
opposing violence by both sides, they are 'caught in the middle'.

Spending time with the guerrillas and in the villages allows a clearer view. 
The episode above was not the first time I saw 'ordinary' Acehnese risk their 
lives to save GAM fighters. Wherever I travelled with the guerrillas, the 
'people caught in the middle' repeatedly took sides, providing food, 
information and heartfelt encouragement. I had experienced the same in East 
Timor in 1998. 

During the first weeks of the new offensive, we were often ushered into a home 
late at night where an older woman would grind chili paste, fry cupfuls of 
dried fish and boil a large pot of rice for 'her boys.' Even when criticising 
GAM, Acehnese villagers referred to the guerrillas as their army, often 
concluding: 'They are our people, they are us.'

In the towns, that close identification lies beneath the surface. During the 
day, Indonesian military commanders pointed to their growing control. At night, 
I'd wander about, usually ending at a simple restaurant, where, invariably, an 
animated gathering of regular customers would soon be saying, 'Of course, 
everyone supports the guerrillas. We just have to be careful now.' 

What are you fighting for?

Another common argument against the Free Aceh guerrillas is that they are not 
really fighting for independence. Other factors motivate them, like power, 
boredom, money, local prestige, and ethnic hatred.

This view also forms part of the Indonesian military's own armoury. I recall a 
meeting with General Djali Yusuf, the army's top man in Aceh, and an Acehnese 
himself, in January 2003. Lifting in turn a lighter, then a pack of cigarettes 
and finally a trademark cigarette holder to make his point, General Djali 
outlined the composition of GAM: one part genuine nationalist, one part 
revenge-seeker and one part criminal.

I'd heard it before and it was half-true. Many GAM fighters I knew had lost a 
father or brother to Indonesian guns. I'd heard their desire to strike back. 
I'd met GAM commanders who'd been small-time gangsters. Their search for 
excitement and quick money took them to Malaysia, then on to guerilla training 
in Libya in the late 1980s. 

But political involvement transformed the well-travelled ex-gangsters and the 
village-bound revenge-seekers into men of broader horizons with a fierce 
commitment to their land.

None of this should surprise us. Aceh, despite what experts say, is a lot like 
anywhere else. Sociologists, political scientists and historians have long 
recognised that movements attract people for a variety of reasons in addition 
to their stated goals.

Indonesia's independence struggle in 1945-49 was no different. Robert Cribb, in 
his book Gangsters and Revolutionaries, shows that criminal gangs played a key 
role in the struggle against the Dutch. The historian Geoffrey Robinson 
observed in his book about Bali, The Dark Side of Paradise, that the 
nationalist struggle there was initially 'a guise for other struggles', with 
nobles and peasants lining up (and changing sides) depending on pre-existing 
political rivalries.

No one contends that Indonesia's independence struggle was illegitimate because 
participants often had multiple motivations, or because some people sided with 
the enemy, or because opium became the most important trading commodity of the 
Republic-to-be. Yet some commentators try to delegitimise the entire Acehnese 
independence cause because some of its supporters don't have 'pure' motives and 
because, yes, some of them commit crimes.

How bad is GAM?

For some years, human rights organisations have criticised abuses committed by 
insurgent non-state actors, as well as those by states. With good reason. 
During the past two decades, numerous guerrilla insurgencies committed two sins 
together: they used brutal means for selfish ends. 

In Aceh, human rights groups and journalists refer to abuses on both sides. Yet 
what's striking is how few serious abuses GAM has actually committed, resulting 
in what some disappointed critics say is a tendency to 'romanticise' them.

Unlike a dozen guerrilla groups that come to mind, GAM has conducted no 
massacres, nor killed many non-combatants. They have not raped or mutilated 
prisoners or unleashed suicide bombers. Nor have they forced people into 
military service, unlike many insurgencies. Terror ain't GAM's weapon. It has 
an arguably reasonable goal and goes about it as cleanly as almost anyone has.

The catalogue of Indonesian abuses is vast and rich in detail. Numerous reports 
by human rights organisations specify time and place, and sometimes the 
preceding sequences of events. The charges against GAM are few and often vague.

Even the Indonesian military has preferred not to inventory GAM's crimes, 
perhaps fearing the comparison. GAM urges no restriction on access for 
journalists to the territory and comprehensive investigation of violations by 
all parties. Indonesia has long opposed any such scrutiny. Indonesia shut the 
province to journalists during the 1990s and closed it again in June 2003.

Some things GAM doesn't deny. Asserting that they are a more legitimate 
government than Jakarta, GAM claims the right to impose a tax on anyone running 
a business in Aceh. Contractors are supposed to be taxed 10 per cent of their 
profits; small shops, 2.5 per cent. Critics call this extortion. As with any 
tax, people would prefer not to pay. Yet GAM must depend entirely on fellow 
Acehnese, and so far the best evidence suggests most people have willingly 
given what they could.

Other charges leveled at GAM - such as the killing of teachers for teaching the 
Indonesian curriculum - are not, or not yet, substantiated. Investigating two 
alleged instances, I discovered that the mobile police had shot the teachers 
because they were strong GAM supporters regularly donating money. In another 
case, according to a GAM commander, GAM killed a teacher because, despite many 
warnings, he kept giving information about GAM personnel to the TNI (Indonesian 
National Military).

During its battle for the countryside, GAM has killed scores of informers and 
military intelligence agents. However, some informers are held just a few 
months. In western Aceh, I met several itinerant pedlars arrested by GAM. They 
admitted to helping the Indonesians. One told the authorities about the 
location of several unarmed GAM fighters. The mobile police killed two of them. 
Angry GAM fighters beat this man badly when they captured him. After that, he 
told me, the fighters had not harmed him.

Though never saying so, GAM also probably assassinated one well-known academic. 
Their rumoured excuse: GAM central command didn't know and wouldn't have 
approved what the district unit chief decided to do. 

Again, we can compare Aceh with Indonesia's independence movement, despite 
changing times and rising moral standards. In 1945-49, all around the country, 
there were indiscriminate attacks against people working for the Dutch, not 
just informers. Whole villages were laid waste. Revolutionary groups killed 
people for wearing Dutch-style clothing or for carrying items in the colours of 
the Dutch flag. Extortion, robbery, kidnapping, ethnic attacks and terror were 
the stock-in-trade of Indonesia's nationalist struggle.

Ethnic cleansing?

The most inflammatory charge against GAM is that it has engaged in ethnic 
cleansing. With its image of bloodied families heaped and scattered across the 
ground, this charge is intended to set off alarm bells. Here it rings hollow.

Of the many ethnic groups in Aceh, GAM has had conflict with one only, the 
Javanese. The several hundred thousand Javanese differ from the other minority 
groups in three ways. First, they are not indigenous to the region, having all 
come in the last hundred years, most as part of Suharto's transmigration 
program, many during Dutch colonisation. Second, they are from the country's 
dominant ethnic group. Third, and most critically, for years thousands of 
Javanese men have acted alongside government soldiers as village militia forces 
and anti-GAM combatants.

As proof of the deep-seated enmity toward the Javanese, critics point to GAM's 
view (widely shared in much of Indonesia) that Java merely replaced Holland as 
the ruler of the archipelago, to the anti-Javanese invectives of GAM founder 
Hasan di Tiro and to GAM's conception of a sovereign Aceh, which critics say is 
backward-looking and even racist. 

GAM's nationalism does look back - but only to a past sovereignty. And it looks 
forward not to a purified ethnic nation-state, but to a multi-ethnic country. 
GAM includes many members of minority groups, including at the highest levels. 
The top commander in Central Aceh is a Gayo, and in Tamiang, two of the four 
district GAM chiefs are Javanese, with numerous Javanese fighters under them.

Still, it helps to hear the critics. A 2002 report of the International Crisis 
Group states that in Central Aceh, where the bulk of long-term Javanese 
settlers live, 'there were raids by GAM guerrillas and local sympathisers on 
Javanese communities in which people were killed, houses looted and burned.' In 
fact, the situation was far more complicated.

Coordinated by the TNI, armed Javanese 'self-defence' groups gathered 
intelligence on GAM, manned checkpoints, patrolled roads, and participated in 
offensive actions against Acehnese villages. Army units and Javanese militias 
reportedly killed at least several hundred Acehnese civilians during the first 
months of 2001. Tens of thousands of Acehnese fled northward, their valuables 
looted and homes razed. 

No one has accused GAM of violence against Javanese women, children and the 
elderly. Honestly or not, GAM has said that Javanese are welcome back after 
independence.

A right to secede?

Many people think Aceh doesn't have a right to separate from Indonesia because 
the Acehnese were part of the Indonesian independence struggle against the 
Dutch in 1945-49. Once having agreed to join, they are forbidden to leave. 
Foreign governments and observers insist this is a basic principle of 
international law. 

But there's another view of international law that has the backing of a solid 
body of scholarly literature. In this view, peoples do have a right to secede 
from an existing state, so long as they are persistent, the crimes against them 
are great, and they meet certain criteria.

Those criteria boil down to two sets of points. First, secession can't make the 
original country more vulnerable to external aggression, leave it in 
disconnected pieces, block its access to the sea, or remove its economic base. 
None of these apply to Aceh.

Second, the future country must be a viable entity, in which the majority of 
people support separation. They must share a strong sense of identity (based on 
language, religion, traditions, or history) and have exhausted other courses of 
resolving their problems. International recognition of the secession of four 
Yugoslav republics was contingent on additional criteria: a democratic 
government and protection of minorities. 

In addition to the ex-Yugoslav republics, there have been several notable 
instances of secession, including Bangladesh and Eritrea. Most suggestively, 
the Papua New Guinea government and the people of Bougainville agreed in 2001 
to allow the province progressively greater autonomy during a ten-year period, 
culminating in an independence referendum.

Independence was the ultimate solution for people suffering under European 
colonial domination. Why shouldn't it be available for people, like the 
Acehnese, experiencing a similar lack of political control, economic 
exploitation and intolerable human rights abuses?

My guess is that after a few years, it won't matter much to anyone but the 
Acehnese that Aceh is independent.

Beyond partisanship

Concerned outsiders shouldn't simply accept Indonesia's right to rule in Aceh. 
Instead, we ought to look more deeply at the facts and more widely at all 
possible solutions. 

History, including Indonesia's, tells us that independence struggles are often 
painful and scarring. Yet in writing about Aceh, many outsiders impose a mythic 
model that the Acehnese can never hope to match. But raising the bar on Aceh's 
already uphill challenge seems exactly these writers' intention. 

The effect - and the greatest tragedy here - is to leave the fate of Aceh in 
the hands of Indonesia's military. 

William Nessen ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is a freelance photojournalist who was 
detained for 39 days in 2003 for covering the latest military offensive from 
the company of GAM guerrillas. He is currently working on a film and book on 
the Aceh conflict. 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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