|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Indonesia
In the wake of tsunami calamity
Indonesian army steps up war in Aceh
By John Roberts
5 January 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
There are growing signs that the Indonesian military (TNI)
is exploiting the current catastrophe in northern Sumatra to crush
the separatist Free Aceh Movement (GAM) and establish its unchallenged
control over the resource-rich province of Aceh.
So far the death toll from the earthquake and tsunami that
devastated Aceh on December 26 is more than 100,000 and is likely
to rise much higher. From Lhokseumawe on the east coast through
the provincial capital Banda Aceh near Sumatras northern
tip to Meulaboh on the west coast, cities and towns have been
obliterated.
Transport and other infrastructure have been torn apart. Hundreds
of thousands are desperately in need of water, food, clothing,
shelter and medical attention. There is now a serious risk that
further lives will be lost through disease and hunger.
Yet, rather than concentrating resources on emergency relief
efforts, the Indonesian armed forces, with the approval of President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, are preoccupied with their counterinsurgency
operations against GAM fighters. While refugees are desperate
for supplies and relief workers for transport, the TNI has launched
offensives against GAM in various locations across the province.
When the tsunami hit, the military already had 40,000 troops
and paramilitary police in Aceh as a result of its ongoing campaign
to wipe out GAM. The current offensive initiated in May 2003,
under former president Megawati Sukarnoputri, included armour
and artillery as well as air and naval support and was billed
as Indonesias own version of the US shock and awe
methods in Iraq.
Despite a state of emergency and a media blackout in Aceh over
the last year, human rights organisations have reported gross
and widespread abuse of local Acehnese by the military, including
arbitrary detention, torture and summary execution. Yudhoyono,
a former general, was Megawatis top security minister and
played a crucial role in planning and overseeing the offensive
until he resigned last March to contest the presidency.
In the aftermath of the December 26 tsunami, the TNIs
responded by dispatching an additional 15,000 troops to Aceh,
ostensibly to carry out humanitarian relief work. But far from
the well-oiled machine that swung into action against GAM the
previous year, the militarys emergency assistance in the
province has been marked by disorganisation, delays and disinterest.
On December 27, TNI chief General Endriartono indicated that
the military would respond in kind to a unilateral ceasefire declared
by exiled GAM leaders in Sweden to allow relief efforts to go
ahead. It soon became clear, however, that the TNI had no intention
of passing up the opportunity to inflict a defeat on GAM, which
had suffered losses during the tsunami and earthquake.
The first media reports related to a particular incident. On
Thursday, a GAM spokesman announced that Indonesian troops had
killed two GAM members in the Peurelak area of East Aceh, including
the local commander Afrizal bin Abdul Manaf. He said TNI troops
had also set fire to a house in the village of Idi Reayeuk. A
TNI spokesman acknowledged the clash, but blamed GAM rebels for
provoking the incident by ambushing a convoy of military trucks
carrying relief supplies.
Sweden-based GAM spokesman Bakhtiar Abdullah strenuously denied
that GAM fighters had attacked a convoy. In turn, he accused the
military of harassing and torturing suspected GAM sympathisers
in refugee camps. The TNIs abuse of refugees was also reported
to the Aceh Referendum Information Centre by volunteers working
in Banda Aceh. They alleged that refugees on the way to relief
centres were being interrogated by the military.
Bakhtiar told the British-based Guardian: The
reports we received are that they are moving in more troops under
the guise of relief operations. We know that they are trying to
track down GAM fighters in the area. We have given strict orders
to maintain a ceasefire and hoped that the Indonesian military
would respect that ceasefire and refrain from military action.
As it turned out, the clash was not an isolated incident. The
Jakarta Post this week reported that the TNI had launched
operations against GAM hideouts in Teupin, Batee, Seunebok Langa,
Gampung Jalan, Kuburan Cina, Buket Linteung and Buket Jok areas
of East Aceh. In north Aceh, army attacks were underway in Makmur,
Gandapura and Peusangan.
The TNI not only confirmed that the operations were taking
place, but was completely unapologetic about them. In comments
cited in the Guardian, Colonel Ahmad Yani Basuki declared:
We have to maintain security operations to prevent the rebels
from attacking vital installations and relief operations.
According to Basuki, only one third of TNI troops were involved
in military operations and the remainder had been assigned to
relief work. He provided no evidence, however, for any of his
assertions.
Lieutenant-Colonel D.J. Nachrowi told the Jakarta Post that
the TNI was now carrying out two duties: humanitarian work
and the security operation. He put forward a different argument,
maintaining that the military was obliged by the state of emergency
to attack GAM. The raids to quell the secessionist movement
in Aceh will continue unless the president issues a decree to
lift the civil emergency and assign us to merely play a humanitarian
role in Aceh, he said.
Yudhoyono has shown no intention of lifting the civil emergency
in Aceh or of reaching a temporary truce with GAM. Instead, in
an appeal for national unity, the president has called on the
separatist fighters to lay down their weapons, in other words
surrender, to facilitate relief operations. The military, of course,
would remain armed to the teeth.
Various human rights groups have confirmed that military operations
are continuing in Aceh. A spokesman for the British-based Tapol
organisation, Paul Barber, told the Inter Press Service News Agency:
Under the civil emergency, the Indonesian military continue
to play a leading role and there has been no cutback in the level
of military operations in most of the territory.
Nasruddin Abubakar, president of the Aceh Referendum Information
Centre, angrily condemned the TNIs actions, saying: The
government is still maintaining the civil emergency and continuing
on with military operations in Aceh despite the fact that the
death toll is now close to 100,000. Is the government not yet
satisfied with the killing? Are Acehnese not citizens of Indonesia?
The fact that the Indonesian military has been devoting resourcestroops,
transport and coordinationto its military operations would
help to explain the limited and chaotic character of the relief
effort in Aceh. Air transport is crucial in reaching remote areas
and moving relief supplies into the province, but it has been
a shambles. The Indonesian air force has made no effort to either
regulate airspace over Aceh or to provide air traffic control
to vital airports in Banda Aceh and Medan where international
aid is arriving.
Numerous media reports point to the bottlenecks in ferrying
aid into Aceh and distributing it. On New Years Eve, an aircraft
had to wait 14 hours in Banda Aceh for a takeoff clearance. At
one stage the only surviving air traffic controller in Aceh was
reportedly left to operate the airport alone. Trucks and fuel
have been in critically short supply. The Sydney Morning Herald
reported that US relief organisations in Medan, forced to
rely on their own resources, had begged, borrowed and rented
80 trucks to provide transport.
The disinterest of the Indonesian military in the plight of
Acehnese is most graphically revealed by the inexplicable delay
in surveying the extent of the disaster on the west coast, which
lay in the direct path of the tsunami. It took four days for the
Indonesian air force to send a flight over Meulaboh, which one
journalist likened to the scene after the Hiroshima atomic bomb.
Highly publicised relief operations are now underway by US
and Australian military, which are providing key logistical support.
US military helicopters flew the first significant supplies of
aid into Meulaboh last weekend. The Australian military teams
are in Banda Aceh providing clean water and other assistance.
All criticism of the TNI and its appalling human rights has been
shelved as these efforts are hailed in the media as ushering in
a new period of cooperation.
These joint operations have very little to do with any genuine
concern the victims of the December 26 disaster. Both Australian
and the US have been seeking to reestablish working relations
with the Indonesian military since the fall of the Suharto dictatorship
in 1998. The relief efforts provide an ideal opportunity not only
to work closely with the TNI but potentially to establish a foothold
in Aceha key region with significant oil and reserves adjacent
to the strategic Strait of Malacca.
As for the TNI, the support provided by the US and Australian
military for relief efforts allows the diversion of additional
Indonesian military forces into its operations against GAM. There
is every indication that the Indonesian military has the tacit
support of Washington and Canberra, which, unlike in the case
of East Timor, have maintained a complete silence on Jakartas
dirty war in Aceh over the last 18 months.
US military establishment thinking was revealed in a recent
comment by the US-based Stratfor Global Intelligence thinktank.
It noted that the tsunami disaster might prove to be a boon for
the militarys campaign against GAM. Yudhoyono will
send more troops into the province to rebuild and clean up ...
If GAM does not agree to settle the problem peacefully, Yudhoyono
will have more troops on hand to clean them out, it noted.
What is emerging in embryo in Aceh is a return to the relations
that existed prior to 1998, when the US, Australia and other major
powers relied on the ruthless Suharto dictatorship to safeguard
their economic and strategic interests in Indonesia and the region.
See Also:
Tsunami death toll
in Indonesia approaching 100,000
[31 December 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |