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Indonesia targets civilians in its military offensive in Aceh
By John Roberts
4 June 2003
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Despite attempts by the Indonesian government to block information
on the militarys activities, it is becoming clear that the
offensive by the Indonesian armed forces (TNI) in the northern-most
province of Aceh against the separatist Free Aceh Movement (GAM)
involves a deliberate campaign of mass terror against the civilian
population.
The operation began on May 19 after the government of President
Megawati Sukarnoputri broke off internationally brokered peace
talks and authorised a shock and awe campaign to wipe
out GAM. The all-out assault involves 30,000 TNI troops and 13,000
police supported by artillery, armour, aircraft and naval craft
against an estimated 5,000 lightly armed GAM guerillas.
The most hardline elements in the military hierarchy have long
advocated such an operation. Ominously TNI spokesmen have declared
one of its main objects is to separate GAM activists from the
provinces four million population. After decades of brutal
repression at the hands of Jakarta and the TNI, there is widespread
sympathy among ordinary people for the separatist fighters.
TNI chief General Endriartono Sutarto admitted to the media
that hundreds of thousands of Acehnese might be forced from their
homes. Our first priority is to separate GAM from the people,
because we dont want people to get hurt. If we have to move
them to win this war, we will, but thats a last resort.
The government has set up 82 camps to house up to 200,000 people
under military guard but provided very little food or shelter
for those it intends to intern. Media reports indicate that well
over 20,000 people have already been forced to flee their homes
in an operation that the countrys defence minister predicts
will last six months.
Such counter-insurgency campaigns, including those
of the French in Algeria and the British in Malaya in the 1950s,
and the Americans in Vietnam in the 1960s, have invariably been
associated with atrocities against the civilian population, as
it is forced to seek refuge in designated areas.
From the information available it appears that the TNI is directly
targeting civilians as the centerpiece of its operational plan.
* According to the provincial education authorities, more than
400 schools have been torched.
* Residents in the village of Cot Rabo insist that seven young
men, including two 12-year-old boys, killed by the TNI on May
21 were farmers and that no weapons were found among the bodies.
Operation spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Yani Basuki has announced
that the armys investigation concluded that the seven were
all GAM rebels or spies. In a sinister twist, Basuki accused GAM
of adopting a new tactic in which unarmed sympathisers and spies
were being inserted in the frontline to make it appear they were
civilians, and in this way bolster international sympathy for
GAM when the TNI killed them.
* The San Francisco Chronicle reported on May 30 that
30 soldiers had entered a mosque in the village of Alue Iet the
previous week, stabbing and bashing a male civil servant called
Masuni and shooting dead his friend Husseini. In the nearby village
of Awegetah, resident Usman Menamin reported that soldiers had
burned the motorcycle of his brother and a friend at a roadblock.
Residents later found the bodies of the two men with their hands
and toes cut off. According to the report, villagers say these
abuses are commonplace.
* In the first week of the military offensive, the price of
rice and cooking oil nearly doubled. Food supplies to the provincial
capital Banda Aceh have dwindled and the road from the capital
to Northern Sumatra is under threat. Shopkeepers say they will
no longer make the journey because their trucks will either be
attacked and burned by unidentified men or their food
stocks pilfered by TNI troops at the numerous check points along
the roads. Similar problems are occurring in other areas.
* In the GAM stronghold district of Bireuen the irrigation
system has been deliberately damaged, threatening 6,500 hectares
of rice crop that feeds a population of 150,000, as well as the
areas income earning cash crops of coconuts, pawpaws, bananas
and mangoes.
Reports remain sketchy because of TNI and government efforts
to censor information and remove independent observers.
The Aceh operation deputy commander, Brigadier-General Bambang
Darmono, told a press conference on May 24 that dispatches from
Agence France-Presse (AFP) and the Indonesian newspaper Korantemp
on the May 21 civilian killings were a provocation
and threatened to sue both for libel. Any reporting of statements
by GAM has been forbidden.
Jakarta has also sought to silence GAM spokesmen outside the
country. It has formally requested that Sweden deport for trial
in Indonesia four GAM members, including prominent leader Hasan
Tiro. Sweden has refused the request on the basis that the four
are all Swedish citizens.
According to the Jakarta Post, Indonesias Foreign
Affairs Ministry has informed five international non-government
organisations and four United Nations agencies concerned with
humanitarian relief in Aceh that they should leave the province.
Declaring that the local government and Indonesian Red Cross would
handle all relief work, Foreign Ministry spokesman Marty Natalegawa
declared: They should be aware of this policy and leave
Aceh. Their physical presence and direct contact in Aceh are not
needed due to security reasons.
In similar vein the Home Affairs Ministry has ordered the World
Bank to suspend its aid operation in Aceh that annually supplies
$US7.5 million to 1.7 million people in 2,875 villages.
The US based Human Rights Watch (HRW) has reported two attacks
by thugs on the offices of the Indonesian human rights group Kontras
(Commission for the Disappeared and Victims of Violence) in Jakarta
on May 26 and 27.
Kontras has been monitoring TNI activity in Aceh. It accused
youths in the Permuda Panca Marga, a group associated with pro-government
violence, of involvement in the attacks. HRWs Asia division
executive director Brad Adams issued a statement noting: The
failure of the police to respond to these attacks on a leading
human rights organisation sets a bad precedent for all groups
working in Aceh.
Last Friday US Deputy Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz issued
a word of caution to the Indonesian government about its conduct
of the military offensive.
Speaking at the Asian Security Conference in Singapore alongside
Indonesian Defence Minister Matori Abdul Djalil, Wolfowitz declared
that the questions in Aceh could not be settled militarily and
required a political solution. He called for international monitors
to be allowed into the province to encourage the world to
believe that Indonesia is behaving and its troops are behaving.
To further emphasise the point, Wolfowitz referred to the murder
of two US citizens at the Freeport-McMoRan copper and gold mine
in Papua in August last year in which TNI involvement has been
indicated by both the Indonesian police and an initial FBI investigation.
The issue of the Freeport killings is a very important issue,
Wolfowitz pointedly remarked. We have made it clear at the
highest level we need satisfactory cooperation from Indonesia
or it will affect our whole relationship.
The statement is significant, since Wolfowitz has been among
those within the Bush administration pushing for the lifting of
a US Congressional ban on links between the TNI and the Pentagon,
imposed after the TNI-organised violence in East Timor in 1999.
Only recently, administration supporters in the US Congress
brushed aside objections from relatives of the Freeport victims,
voting for training funds for the TNI from Washingtons International
Education and Training Program.
Wolfowitzs remarks indicate a growing concern in Washington
at the consequences of the TNIs indiscriminate terror campaign
for the provinces long-term stability. The US has substantial
economic interests in the oil and gas rich area, including a giant
refinery, which is part owned by the US corporation ExxonMobil.
See Also:
Indonesia launches shock
and awe military offensive in Aceh
[22 May 2003]
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