Indonesia Wants Foreign Troops Out Soon
Islam Online
January 12, 2005
http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2005-01/12/article04.shtml
 

---
photos:

Mixing missionary activities with relief work
reportedly caused Indonesia to restrict movement of
aid groups. (Reuters)
http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2005-01/12/images/pic04.jpg

An Acehnese looks at a missing persons board outside a
hospital in the tsunami-hit town of Banda Aceh 
http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2005-01/12/images/pic04a.jpg
---
 
 
JAKARTA, January 12 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies)
- Amid reports of increasing missionary work in the
biggest Muslim nation on earth, Indonesia stepped up
its effort to assert control over international relief
operations, saying all foreign troops have to leave
the country by March 26, and that its own forces would
take over.

The move comes one day after Indonesian military
imposed sweeping restrictions on foreign aid workers
in tsunami-hit Aceh amid reports that some evangelical
groups are mixing Christian missionary work with
humanitarian aid.

In Indonesia, badly hit by the December 26
earthquake-triggered-tsunami waves, military chief
General Endriartono Sutarto, told reporters the armed
forces would accompany and monitor aid groups on all
missions outside the provincial capital of Banda Aceh,
saying the move was needed to curtail a growing threat
from “separatist rebels”, according to Agence
France-Presse (AFP).

Foreign aircraft and ships bringing supplies into
Banda Aceh, the hub of the humanitarian effort after
the disaster that killed more than 100,000 people on
Sumatra island, would also no longer have unrestricted
access.

Sutarto said a military officer would now be placed on
board all foreign aircraft and ships, and they would
be given clearance to operate in the province for a
maximum of 14 days.

He said the measures were needed to protect foreign
aid workers from the Free Aceh Movement (GAM), which
has been fighting for independence since 1976.

No Threat

But the leader of the separatist rebels in Aceh denied
the military's accusations.

“The Aceh National Armed Forces guarantees the safety
and free access to all parts of Aceh for international
aid workers,” said a statement from the rebel's
supreme commander, Muzakir Manaf.

An aid group in Aceh, Oxfam, and a security analyst,
Sidney Jones, also rejected Sutarto's assertions,
saying there was no threat from rebels to the relief
effort.

Jones, an expert from the International Crisis Group
on Indonesian military and security affairs, told AFP
the government's real motive was to reassert the
military's control as it seeks to crush the rebellion.

But a senior UN official downplayed new restrictions
on tsunami relief workers.

“In no way has it impacted or diminished our ability
to move about or to access populations,” Kevin Kennedy
from the UN's Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs told reporters at UN headquarters
in New York.

The Indonesian military imposed marital law in Aceh in
May 2003, banning most foreign journalists and aid
workers from the province, as it ramped up its
military offensive against the fighters.

The government lifted the restrictions on aid workers
and journalists immediately after the tsunami
disaster, although a state of emergency remains in
place.

Missionary Activities

The restrictions on the movement of aid groups in
Indonesia came hot on the heels of reports about some
aid groups mixing Christian missionary work with
relief operations.

The Baltimore Sun reported earlier this week that some
evangelical groups are mixing Christian missionary
work with humanitarian aid in countries ravaged by the
tsunamis and earthquake.

Calling it a provocative approach shunned by the
majority of faith-based relief organizations, the
paper said that spreading faith this way can
antagonize the people they're trying to help, and
there's evidence of concern among Muslims, Hindus and
others.

Evangelical leaders, however, say they define
humanitarian aid as having a spiritual component.

Aid should “share the love of Christ,” said Rev.
Franklin Graham, son of the Rev. Billy Graham and the
outspoken leader of Samaritan's Purse, which is
shipping shelter materials and other emergency
donations to Indonesia and Sri Lanka, according to the
paper.

Of the victims and their families, he said, “I would
hope that they would come to know the God I know.”

The notion of sharing "the love of Christ" can take
many forms: adoptions of orphaned children, religious
pamphlets tucked into relief kits. Sometimes it's
establishing relationships in the hope of future
influence, the paper said.

“They will not give up the goal of church planting,”
said Scott Moreau, editor of Evangelical Missions
Quarterly and a Wheaton College professor.

Baltimore-based World Relief, the humanitarian arm of
the National Association of Evangelicals, is focused
on humanitarian aid while looking for opportunities to
later encourage conversions in southern Asia.

World Relief spokesman Chris Pettit cited as a model
the group's work helping war-ravaged Cambodians in the
early 1990s. Long after the crisis, World Relief
workers revived their relationships with residents and
encouraged them to build churches. Pettit said there
are now 300 churches in the Cambodian areas where they
worked.

“Historically, the best approach is to provide help
and build trust, and then through that trust,
opportunities arise. We plant the seeds,” he said.

That philosophy, according to the paper, is at odds
with the faith-based relief agencies that deliver aid
for aid's sake, such as the Christian relief agency
World Vision and Catholic Relief Services.

“They consider the very fact that they're there and
compassionate as a viable form of Christian witness
without having to convert people,” Moreau said.

According to the paper, quantifying the number of
evangelical relief workers in the region is difficult,
given that few belong to larger coordinating groups
and that missionary groups may include large numbers
of local residents. But there is evidence that they
have a significant presence there.

Emotional reaction

In reaction to the increasing missionary work, an
anonymous electronic text message spread through
Indonesia this week captured a glimmer of the
anxieties.

“Please ask among friends who would like to adopt
orphans from Aceh. 300 orphans coming soon. Need
Muslim homes. Christian missionaries want them. Pls
help!” it read, the paper reported.

That message caused such an uproar that the government
pledged to try to reunite the Aceh province's orphaned
children with family members, the Indonesian Embassy
said.

At the same time, groups such as Indians Against
Christian Aggression are sending out a steady stream
of stories that tell of overzealous missionaries
exploiting vulnerable non-Christians. Headlines on the
group's Web site this week included “Christian
Missionaries Seek Converts Amidst Tsunami Victims” and
“Evangelist Comes Looking For Orphans in a 747
Boeing.”

The CNSN news also said that Christian missionaries
are exploiting Tsunami disaster to spread the Word of
God along with relief supplies in South Asian nations
devastated by the tsunami. 

http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2005-01/12/article04.shtml


                
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