http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/04/09/ex-combatants-politics-aceh-s-post-conflict-challenge.html

Ex-combatants in politics — Aceh’s post-conflict challenge
Aboeprijadi Santoso, Banda Aceh | Mon, 04/09/2012 8:51 AM

Wherever you look, whoever you turn to when talking to people in Aceh today, 
the feedback seems virtually universal: Aceh will turn red. In other words, the 
political movement founded by former rebel group GAM (the Free Aceh Movement), 
the Aceh Party (PA), is expected to win the governorship and a considerable 
number of top jobs at the district level in the April 9 elections.

More significant will be the differences between the contesting parties. Even 
more important, perhaps, is, if they win, how did they achieve it? Will there 
be smooth or violent elections? Will it be a fair vote, or will there be 
threats and silent intimidation?

History has demonstrated that former armed fighters — ex-armed rebels, 
ex-guerillas, or ex-revolutionaries — tend to become a critical agency in 
post-conflict situations.

Very recently, we have seen how Timor Leste has been able to turn a volatile 
situation into a stable one that led to successful presidential elections. Only 
a few years earlier, though, in 2006, the country almost became a failed state.

Back then, the new military corps came into a serious conflict with the 
national police, resulting in many deaths. Both recruited from ex-guerillas who 
felt that they were discriminated against.

Independent Indonesia also faced such challenges. The drive toward the 
formation of a professional military had provoked the resistance of politically 
motivated and idealistic armed revolutionary units. It ultimately led to the 
so-called Madiun Affair in 1948.

Now, Aceh, too, has to deal with its former armed fighters. Like Indonesia’s 
ex-revolutionaries in the late 1940s and Timor Leste’s former guerillas in the 
mid 2000s, the Acehnese ex-rebel combatants have to find new and secure 
positions in a post-conflict situation.

Soon after the Helsinki Peace pact in 2005, one faction of former rebels, known 
as the ex-Libyan-trained fighters of the late 1980s and the generation of 1998, 
had consolidated its power and influence away from the elder, exiled leaders of 
the 1970s who founded the AM, Aceh Merdeka, later renamed GAM.

These young ex-combatants subsequently supported the Irwandi Yusuf–Mohammad 
Nazar candidacy, who won the gubernatorial election in 2006. The GAM’s sharp 
split has thus since become a persistent fact.

The older GAM generation, led by Malik Mahmud and Zaini Abdullah, succeeded in 
turning the tables thanks to the legitimacy bestowed upon them by the Wali 
Nanggroe (Aceh-state guardian) Hasan di Tiro. PA, which they founded in 2007, 
became a mass party. Its hegemonic influence was confirmed as they were able to 
bring home the Wali in 2008.

For the first time in Indonesia’s history, it was possible for a supreme rebel 
leader to return home and it was massively and intensely welcomed by people. 
That in itself was an exemplary democratic achievement of post-Soeharto 
Indonesia. But it didn’t subsequently bring a better, stable and peaceful 
democracy to Aceh itself for three reasons.

Firstly, the institutions and instruments to implement the Helsinki regulations 
are only partly able to accommodate the wishes and interests of the former 
combatants: the ex-Panglima Wilayah (regional commanders), the ex-Panglima 
Sagoe (district commanders) and their followers.

Some have greatly benefited from Governor Irwandi’s rule and have become 
wealthy businessmen. Most, however, have benefited less and their followers not 
at all.

Secondly, the older PA leaders are now determined to gain power as this is 
their last chance to lead and rule the province. They do so by modernizing the 
party structure and organization, by resisting Governor Irwandi’s efforts to be 
re-elected, and — in general — by threats and intimidation.

Thirdly, this has resulted in exhausting political-legal battle, often 
interspersed with violence, for months.

The PA’s boycott of the elections gave rise to the prospect of greater 
instability. Jakarta’s intervention to avoid this by postponing the elections 
until April 9, in order to allow the PA to participate, may be well reasoned, 
but it also made the competition and anxiety even more intense.

For Governor Irwandi, who was poised to win if the elections were not 
postponed, now has to mobilize power and funds to compete with the PA. And the 
PA, in turn, has to play the game very carefully so that it should not arouse 
Jakarta’s suspicion of a secret agenda of independence if they not only rule 
the parliament but command the administration.

The PA invited four Army generals to campaign for the party, including two 
former regional commanders, one of whom — Gen. Soenarko — had been particularly 
controversial due to allegations of harsh treatment of former rebels.

The postponement of the elections has shaped a dilemma for the ex-combatants: 
Either they stay put at Irwandi’s camp or change sides and support the PA.

It’s a historic moment for them, one that would reveal their real motives as 
either opportunistic (for business reasons) or idealistic (wanting rural 
electorates).

It’s important to note that the ex-combatants are rooted in the former GAM 
strongholds in rural areas. It explains why the statement of the older GAM 
leaders and its commander Muzakkir Manaf as being “neutral” in the 2006 
elections resulted in a great victory for the Irwandi group, who used the GAM 
flag as a symbol.

Now it’s the other way around: it’s the older leaders, with Zaini Abdullah and 
Muzakir Manaf as their candidates — brilliantly shortened to ‘Zikir”, meaning 
collective prayer to admire God almighty — that is taking the lead as they 
evoke GAM symbols and the late Wali Hasan Tiro’s legacy.

Unfortunately, it’s hard to pinpoint the numbers and the strength — let alone 
the social-class bases — of the ex-combatant commanders who support Irwandi and 
the Zikir. But the latest survey suggests the latter would win with 46 percent 
(against 22 percent) which will not require a second round of voting.

Whatever the outcome, it will reflect the general assessment of common Acehnese 
in villages, who know what contributions the ex-combatants made during the 
conflict, and will weigh it against their role in peace time as they decide at 
the private ballot boxes.

The writer is a journalist.

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



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