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Indonesia signs shaky peace deal with Acehnese separatists
By John Roberts
20 August 2005
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On August 15, the exiled leaders of the separatist Free Aceh
Movement (GAM) signed a pact with the Indonesian government in
the Finnish capital Helsinki to end their 29-year struggle for
independence. The terms were worked out in five negotiating sessions
held in Helsinki since January, under the auspices of the Crisis
Management Initiative Organisation headed by former Finland President
Martii Ahtisaari.
Under the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), GAM has formally
abandoned its central demand for a separate state on the northern
tip of the island of Sumatra and agreed to disarm its fighters.
In comments last month, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
stated: If the conflict is declared over, then within about
three months GAM will be expected to hand over its guns, which
would then be destroyed.
GAM has accepted a form of limited autonomy. The provincial
Acehnese authority will have the right to retain 70 percent of
the revenues from oil and gas production, and other economic concessions
are extended. In addition, the peace deal will free up some $US5
billion in foreign aid that was promised earlier this year for
tsunami relief.
Significant aspects of the MoU are open to interpretation and
have the potential to lead to its breakdown. The most contentious
issues are the provisions covering an amnesty for GAM members
and the disarming of its fighters, GAMs political rights,
the withdrawal of TNI and paramilitary police from the province
and the monitoring of the process by unarmed observers from the
Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the European
Union (EU).
GAM was represented at the talks by its exiled leaders based
in Sweden, who themselves expressed concerns over whether Jakarta
could be trusted. GAM spokesman Bakhtiar Abdullah told Reuters
on August 12: We [the GAM exiles] hope we can go back to
Aceh one of these days, but I dont think it will be soon
as first we have to see some kind of guarantees that we will be
safe.
GAM representative Nur Rahman told the AKI news service that
while he believed the Indonesian government was committed to the
peace settlement, he was less confident about its implementation
and the governments ability to control hardliners in the
Indonesian military. He claimed that an additional 900 troops
had been moved into Aceh and that at least 10 GAM fighters and
300 to 400 civilians had been killed since July 17.
There are ample reasons for the scepticism. In April 2003,
the government of president Megawati Sukarnoputri, in which the
current president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, served as chief security
minister, sabotaged talks by imposing new conditions and arresting
senior GAM officials who were part of a group monitoring the ceasefire
in the province.
In May 2003, Jakarta imposed a state of emergency and launched
a massive military offensive against GAM, involving 50,000 heavily-armed
troops and paramilitary police. The Indonesian armed forces (TNI)
clamped a media blackout on the province but persistent evidence
emerged of torture, extra-judicial killings and other abuses of
democratic rights by troops. While the emergency was eased following
the December 26 tsunami, the TNI exploited the disaster to weaken
GAM and force it to the negotiating table on Jakartas terms.
Yudhoyono, who won the presidency last year, is already under
pressure to back away from the agreement. Megawatis Indonesian
Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), the second largest faction
in the House of Representatives (DPR), has accused the president
of permitting international interference in a domestic issue by
allowing the deployment of foreign monitors in Aceh.
Equally contentious is allowing GAM to function as a political
party. Under Indonesias anti-democratic electoral law, a
party must be organised in at least half the countrys 32
provincesa provision that excludes GAM, which specifically
appeals only to Acehnese. Last month the PDI-P refused to join
Vice President Yusuf Kalla and nine parties in agreeing to change
the law to allow for the locally-based parties in Aceh.
As a result, the agreement was signed this week without any
changes in the electoral law. The MoU states only that there will
be a new law on the governing of Aceh by March 31,
2006 and that elections will take place in the province in April
2006. It declares that full participation of all Acehnese
people in local and national elections will be guaranteed in accordance
with the Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia but makes
no direct reference to GAM.
The document is vague on the granting of amnesty. The MoU states
all persons involved in GAM will be granted an amnesty
within 15 days of signing, providing they cease all military actions
against the government. A later part, however, refers to amnesties
being granted only to all pardoned political prisoners.
Last month, Communications Minister Sofyan Djalil declared
that the amnesty would only cover GAM prisoners charged with treason
and not criminal offences. Indonesian human rights advocates point
out that most GAM prisoners have been charged with criminal offences,
including firearms charges and the illegal collection of taxes.
Between 1,300 and 2,500 GAM members are in custody.
Moreover, while GAM fighters are committed to disarming under
international supervision by December 31, the Indonesian military
retains the right to a substantial presence in the province14,700
organic TNI troops and 9,100 local police. Even this
limit applies only to normal peacetime circumstances.
TNI commander General Endriartono Sutarto has already publicly
hinted that as many as 20,000 extra troops will remain in Aceh
in case of frictions within the GAM structure.
A political victory for Jakarta
Despite the criticisms of the PDI-P, much of the political
establishment in Jakarta regards the deal as a significant victory.
Aceh is one of the countrys key oil and gas-producing areas
and there are hopes that peace will encourage foreign investment
in the province and elsewhere in Indonesia. The end of fighting
in Aceh will also enable the TNI to redeploy forces to West Papua
to crush separatist opposition to Jakartas rule.
The Aceh agreement will assist Yudhoyonos efforts to
re-establish military relations with the US. The TNIs brutal
record of repression, particularly in East Timor, Aceh and West
Papua, led to US Congressional bans on ties between the US and
Indonesian militaries. The Bush administration will use the deal
to argue for the lifting of the remaining bans and a return to
the close relations that existed under the Suharto dictatorship.
There is no doubt that the TNIs operations over the past
two years and the December 26 tsunami had an impact on GAM. At
least 160,000 people out of the provinces population of
four million perished. As of July 7, Acehs Development Planning
Board calculated that there were still 518,450 internally displaced
persons in the province, of whom 58 percent are living with host
families, 30 percent in tents and 12 percent in government Transitional
Living Centres. The struggle for survival preoccupies most of
the population, including many GAM supporters.
However, GAMs willingness to abandon its longstanding
struggle for independence has more fundamental roots. The demand
for a separate Acehnese state represented the class interests
of a privileged stratum. From the sixteenth century on, the Aceh
Sultanate defied Portuguese, British and Dutch attempts at colonisation.
Aceh did not come under effective Dutch control until 1904, much
later than the rest of the Indonesian archipelago, and resistance
to Dutch rule never completely ended.
The Acehnese ruling class agreed to join the Indonesian republic
following World War II on the basis that they would enjoy considerable
autonomy. By 1954, violations by the Jakarta government, which
wanted greater control over the provinces natural resources,
had provoked a separatist uprising. Over the course of three years
of fighting, the rebellion was suppressed.
The resentment of the local elite toward the Suharto dictatorships
plundering of oil and gas revenues together with broader anger
over the TNIs repressive methods led to the formation of
GAM in 1976 and the launching of a guerilla war. Like other nationalist
movements that emerged at the time, it was based on mixture of
sectarianism and ethnic exclusivity. It made no attempt to connect
the struggle in Aceh with the wider opposition throughout Indonesia
against the dictatorship. Instead, the Acehnese elite looked to
Brunei as its modelan oil-rich Islamic mini-state amid hundreds
of millions of people living in poverty and backwardness.
GAM based its perspective above all on the possibility of winning
great power backing for an independent statelet. In the wake of
the collapse of the Suharto junta in 1998, the Acehnese separatists
saw the opportunity for realising their perspective, particularly
after the Australian-led UN intervention into East Timor in 1999,
which led to the establishment of that half-island as a separate
nation.
Having secured their interests in East Timor, Washington and
Canberra were deeply concerned about the implications the breakup
of Indonesia and sought to repair relations with Jakarta. Both
countries publicly declared their support for the national integrity
of Indonesia, effectively giving the green light for a crackdown
on separatist movements in Aceh, Papua and other areas of Indonesia.
Unlike the hypocritical hue and cry that was raised over the actions
of the TNI in East Timor, its brutal operations in Aceh were studiously
ignored.
Without any imperialist backing, the GAM leadership concluded
it had no choice but to cut a deal, no matter how one-sided the
terms. Having concluded the agreement as a junior partner to Jakarta,
the Acehnese elites will seek to shore up their privileged position
at the expense of the masses of ordinary Acehnese, who will continue
to suffer economic and political oppression.
See Also:
Jakarta pressures Acehnese
rebels over peace deal
[15 June 2005]
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