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Indonesian military intensifies operations in Aceh
By John Roberts
24 June 2003
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Despite scant media coverage of its operations in the north
Sumatra province of Aceh, evidence is emerging that the Indonesian
armed forces (TNI) is engaged in forced evacuations and extra-judicial
executions as part of its campaign to terrorise the local population
and wipe out the separatist Free Aceh Movement (GAM).
Last week the air force used its US-built F-16 fighters for
the first time to bomb a five-kilometre stretch near the village
of Babus Salam in North Aceh. Air Force Chief of Staff Marshal
Chappy Hakim claimed that a force of 100 to 150 GAM fighters was
operating in the area. He declared the attack was to force
the rebels to come out of their hiding place, as this will make
it easier for us to attack them.
It will give them some shock therapy, Hakim said.
Light Bronco counter-insurgency aircraft were also used to rocket
and strafe the area. Such indiscriminate attacks, which are just
as likely to kill and maim innocent civilians as GAM rebels, are
part of a calculated strategy of driving the local population
out of the war zone.
The Indonesian press reported on June 13 that the TNI had forced
thousands to leave their homes in the village of Juli
so that it could attack a suspected rebel base. The villagers
were shifted into tents at a temporary camp east of Bireuen. According
to the Jakarta Post, by June 14, 13,000 residents
had moved and more were streaming into camps designed to
hold up to 200,000 people.
At a press conference in Jakarta late last week, TNI chief
General Endriartono Sutarto made clear that forced evacuations
have only just begun. He said the six-month operation, now in
its second month, had been divided into two parts. During the
first two months, the emphasis will be on gaining territorial
control while in the last four months the army will concentrate
on separating the civilian population from the GAM.
Sutarto said poor discipline among TNI soldiers
had led to atrocities against civilians. He admitted that his
troops were responsible for the deaths of seven villagers in Matang
Kumbang and the mistreatment of others in Lawang. Both villages
are located in the allegedly pro-GAM area of Bireuen.
The TNI chief also announced that the military had obtained
night vision equipment and intended to carry out more extensive
nighttime operations. We think most people will stay in
their homes at night and only those involved in suspect activities
will be outside, he said. On the night of June 5, TNI troops
opened fire on two German tourists, killing the man and wounding
his wife.
On June 23, the TNI spokesman for Aceh, Colonel Ditya Soedarsono,
said the army had last weekend deployed three dozen British-made
Scorpion tanks, stepping up the offensive. He denied that the
tanks would be used against ordinary people, but to kill
those who are controlled by [GAM leader] Hasan de Tiro to kill
people.
As of last week, the government claimed that 225 GAM rebels
had been killed in fighting and another 300 arrested since the
offensive began on May 19. Police put the number of civilian dead
at 108. These figures, however, are likely to be gross underestimates.
The Indonesian Red Cross (IRC) has announced that it has taken
194 bodies in civilian clothing to morgues in the province. IRC
secretary-general Iyang Sukandar said the figure did not include
those buried immediately after death by their families in accord
with Muslim custom.
On June 12, the Indonesian National Commission on Human Rights
confirmed that a mass grave had been found in Nisam subdistrict,
where there has been heavy fighting. While information is sketchy,
unconfirmed reports put the number of bodies at 100.
Other reports provide a further insight into what is taking
place.
* Villagers in Blang Seupang in the Jeumpa subdistrict forced
a convoy of journalists from RCTI TV and Radio 68-H to stop as
it passed through their village. They told reporters that on June
13 marines entered the village and asked about GAM members. The
soldiers forced 34 men to lie in the ground while they trampled
on them. Four showed the newsmen their wounds.
* The provincial education office has reported that in the
past four months 60 teachers have been murdered and 500 schools
torched. The TNI blames the GAM but the murder of a 20-year-old
Muslim boarding school teacher Muzakir on June 16 points directly
at the military. He was taken from his home in Seumirah by four
men and his body found tied against a tree, dressed only in underwear.
His throat had been slit.
Local villagers were fearful that the killers were still in
the area so the body was left to a group of journalists to cut
down. Again, the military claimed the GAM was responsible. But
villagers said the four men who grabbed Muzakir spoke Javanesethe
dialect spoken by most TNI troops, not GAM members. They also
said that no GAM fighters had been in the area since the TNI took
control at the start of the offensive. Soldiers had set up posts
near the village and regularly patrolled it.
* Legal Aid Institute director for Aceh, Afridal Darmi, told
the Jakarta Post that civil rights activists were regularly
being detained and interrogated by police. Several, including
four members of the Centre for Human Rights and two volunteers
with the Indonesian Red Cross, have been accused of having relations
with the GAM and charged with subversion, which carries a penalty
of life imprisonment.
On June 7, Saiful Bachri, an activist with KONTRAS (the Commission
for Victims of Violence and Missing Persons), was shot dead. The
military blamed the GAM. But one volunteer told the Jakarta
Post that he and many others were fleeing Aceh because they
feared abduction by military-backed militias. At least three pro-Jakarta
militias are active in the province. The TNI used militias to
attack pro-independence groups in East Timor in 1999 and regularly
uses such thugs in West Papua and other areas.
* The military is also attempting to bring local administration
under its control. On June 9, after a meeting in Blang Sepang,
76 village chiefs resigned en masse after being forced to attend
a compulsory propaganda course run by the military on the Unitary
State of Indonesia. Home Affairs Minister Hari Sabamo dismissed
the protest saying: In this emergency situation, we need
leaders who are patriotic. Army chief General Ryamizard
Ryacudu immediately offered to replace the village leaders with
soldiers. Civil administration is reportedly inoperative in many
areas of the province.
These reports provide only a limited glimpse of what is occurring,
as the military has imposed tight media censorship. All Indonesian
journalists in Aceh are required to work with military units and
undertake a four-day course which, the TNI claims, is to teach
first aid and survival skills. The Jakarta Post reported,
however, that the main emphasis is on how to cover the war
from the nationalist perspective. Martial law administrator
Major-General Endang Suwarya has forbidden the airing or printing
of GAM statements and has called for patriotic journalism.
Some 20 officially-vetted foreign journalists operate under
similar constraints. As of last week, all unauthorised foreigners
were banned from entering the province. Indonesian authorities
are hunting William Nessen, an American freelance journalist who
has been operating with a GAM unit. He reported that he tried
to surrender to TNI troops but was fired upon and forced to flee.
Jakarta has stepped up pressure on Sweden to muzzle the GAM
leaders in exile there. A high-level delegation led by Ali Alatas,
a longtime foreign minister under the Suharto dictatorship, presented
Swedish authorities with documents which they claimed prove that
the exiled leaders had organised armed rebellion and acts of terror.
The ability of the Indonesian government and military to proceed
with their huge military offensive in Aceh and to trample on basic
democratic rights has been abetted by an almost complete silence
in Canberra, Washington and the European capitals. Having declared
their support for Indonesias territorial integrity, these
governments are turning a blind eye to the militarys abuses
in Aceh.
The offensive marks a return to the methods of the Suharto
dictatorship, during which thousands of people were killed as
the military sought to crush all opposition to its rule in the
oil and gas rich province.
See Also:
Indonesia targets civilians in its military
offensive in Aceh
[4 June 2003]
Indonesia launches "shock
and awe" military offensive in Aceh
[22 May 2003]
Indonesian military
continues its repression in Aceh
[18 June 2002]
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